School of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, USA.
RTI International, NC, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022 Sep 1;238:109573. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109573. Epub 2022 Jul 14.
We explore injecting risk and HIV incidence among PWID in New York City (NYC), from 2012 to 2019, when incidence was extremely low, <0.1/100 person-years at risk, and during disruption of prevention services due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
We developed an Agent-Based model (ABM) to simulate sharing injecting equipment and measure HIV incidence in NYC. The model was adapted from a previous ABM model developed to compare HIV transmission with "high" versus "low" dead space syringes. Data for applying the model to NYC during the period of very low HIV incidence was taken from the "Risk Factors" study, a long-running study of participants entering substance use treatment in NYC. Injecting risk behavior had not been eliminated in this population, with approximately 15 % reported recent syringe sharing. Data for possible transmission during COVID-19 disruption was taken from previous HIV outbreaks and early studies of the pandemic in NYC.
The modeled incidence rates fell within the 95 % confidence bounds of all of the empirically observed incidence rates, without any additional calibration of the model. Potential COVID-19 disruptions increased the probability of an outbreak from 0.03 to 0.25.
The primary factors in the very low HIV incidence were the extremely small numbers of PWID likely to transmit HIV and that most sharing occurs within small, relatively stable, mostly seroconcordant groups. Containing an HIV outbreak among PWID during a continuing pandemic would be quite difficult. Pre-pandemic levels of HIV prevention services should be restored as quickly as feasible.
我们探讨了 2012 年至 2019 年期间,纽约市(NYC)注射吸毒者(PWID)的感染风险和艾滋病毒发病率,当时发病率极低,<0.1/100 人年。在此期间,由于 COVID-19 大流行,预防服务受到干扰。
我们开发了一个基于代理的模型(ABM)来模拟共享注射设备并测量 NYC 的艾滋病毒发病率。该模型是从之前开发的用于比较“高”与“低”死腔注射器的 HIV 传播的 ABM 模型改编而来。将该模型应用于 HIV 发病率极低时期的 NYC 的数据来自“风险因素”研究,这是一项对进入纽约市物质使用治疗的参与者进行的长期研究。在该人群中,注射风险行为并未消除,约有 15%报告最近有共用注射器的情况。在 COVID-19 干扰期间可能发生传播的数据来自之前的 HIV 暴发和 NYC 大流行早期的研究。
模型化的发病率落在所有经验观察到的发病率的 95%置信区间内,而无需对模型进行任何额外的校准。潜在的 COVID-19 干扰将暴发的可能性从 0.03 增加到 0.25。
极低 HIV 发病率的主要因素是可能传播 HIV 的 PWID 数量极少,而且大多数共享发生在相对较小、稳定、大多数血清学一致的群体中。在持续的大流行期间控制 PWID 中的 HIV 暴发将非常困难。应尽快恢复大流行前的艾滋病毒预防服务水平。