Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Northport VA Medical Center, Northport, NY, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Infectious Diseases, AIDS Program, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Subst Abuse Treat. 2022 Nov;142:108852. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2022.108852. Epub 2022 Jul 30.
Opioid use disorder (OUD) and injection drug use (IDU) place justice-involved individuals at increased risk for acquiring or transmitting HIV or hepatitis C virus (HCV). Methadone and buprenorphine have been associated with reduced opioid IDU; however, the effect of extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX) on this behavior is incompletely studied.
This study examined injection opioid use and shared injection equipment behavior from a completed double-blind placebo-controlled trial of XR-NTX among 88 justice-involved participants with HIV and OUD. Changes in participants' self-reported daily injection opioid use and shared injection equipment was evaluated pre-incarceration, during incarceration, and monthly post-release for 6 months. The study also assessed differences in time to first opioid injection post-release. The research team performed intention to treat and "as treated" (high treatment versus low treatment) analyses.
Fifty-eight of 88 participants (69.5 %) endorsed IDU and 26 (29.5 %) reported sharing injection equipment in the 30 days pre-incarceration; 2 participants (2.2 %) reported IDU during incarceration; 19 (21.6 %) reported IDU one month post-release from prison or jail. Fifty-four (61.4 %) participants had an HIV RNA below 200 copies/mL and 62 (70.5 %) were baseline HCV antibody positive. The 6-month follow-up rate was 49.5 % and 50.5 % for those who received XR-NTX and placebo, respectively, which was not significantly different (p = 0.822). Participants in the XR-NTX and placebo groups had similar low mean opioid injection use post-release and time to first injection opioid use in the Intention-to-treat analysis. In the as-treated analysis, participants in the high treatment group had significantly lower mean proportion of days injecting opioids (13.8 % high treatment versus 22.8 % low treatment, p = 0.02) by month 1, which persisted up to 5 months post-release (0 % high treatment vs 24.3 % low treatment, p < 0.001) and experienced a longer time to first opioid injection post-release (143.8 days high treatment vs 67.4 days low treatment, p < 0.001).
Injection opioid use was low during incarceration and remained low post-release in this justice-involved population. Retention on XR-NTX was associated with reduced intravenous opioid use, which has important implications for reducing transmission of HIV and HCV.
阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)和注射吸毒(IDU)使涉及司法的个人感染或传播艾滋病毒或丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的风险增加。美沙酮和丁丙诺啡已被证明可减少阿片类药物的 IDU;然而,延长释放纳曲酮(XR-NTX)对这种行为的影响尚未完全研究。
这项研究检查了 88 名涉及 HIV 和 OUD 的司法参与者在接受 XR-NTX 完成的双盲安慰剂对照试验中自我报告的每日注射阿片类药物使用和共用注射设备的行为。在入狱前、入狱期间和出狱后 6 个月每月评估参与者每日注射阿片类药物使用和共用注射设备的变化。该研究还评估了出狱后首次注射阿片类药物的时间差异。研究小组进行了意向治疗和“实际治疗”(高治疗与低治疗)分析。
88 名参与者中有 58 名(69.5%)承认 IDU,26 名(29.5%)报告在入狱前 30 天内共用注射设备;2 名参与者(2.2%)报告在监禁期间 IDU;19 名(21.6%)报告在从监狱或监狱获释一个月后 IDU。54 名(61.4%)参与者的 HIV RNA 低于 200 拷贝/ml,62 名(70.5%)基线 HCV 抗体阳性。6 个月的随访率分别为 XR-NTX 组和安慰剂组的 49.5%和 50.5%,差异无统计学意义(p=0.822)。意向治疗分析中,XR-NTX 组和安慰剂组的参与者在出狱后均有相似的低平均阿片类药物注射使用和首次注射阿片类药物使用时间。在实际治疗分析中,高治疗组的参与者在第 1 个月时,注射阿片类药物的天数比例明显较低(13.8%高治疗与 22.8%低治疗,p=0.02),这种情况一直持续到出狱后 5 个月(0%高治疗与 24.3%低治疗,p<0.001),并且首次阿片类药物注射的时间更长(143.8 天高治疗与 67.4 天低治疗,p<0.001)。
在该涉及司法的人群中,监禁期间的注射阿片类药物使用率较低,出狱后仍保持较低水平。保留 XR-NTX 与减少静脉内阿片类药物使用相关,这对减少 HIV 和 HCV 的传播具有重要意义。