College of Nursing, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
Institute for Sexual and Gender Minority Health and Wellbeing, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Northwestern University, 625 N Michigan Ave., 14 Floor, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2024 Oct;53(9):3583-3593. doi: 10.1007/s10508-024-02924-3. Epub 2024 Aug 19.
Substance use is a significant risk factor for HIV infection among adolescent men who have sex with men (AMSM). Substance use may reduce the use of HIV prevention measures or increase the likelihood of engaging in activities with a higher risk of HIV transmission, but there is a lack of studies dedicated to analyzing these mechanisms in adolescents and young MSM. This study aimed to explore the impact of substance use on condomless anal sex (CAS) in a large, racially diverse sample of AMSM. Additionally, we investigated how an individual's general level of substance use moderated the association between substance use before sex and CAS at the partnership level. Baseline data for an HIV prevention intervention were collected through online surveys from April 2018 to June 2020. The sample consisted of 1624 AMSM (M age, 16.69 years) who reported at least one sexual partner in the previous 3 months. Participants provided information about their three most recent sexual partners, including their relationship to the partner, PrEP use, frequency of alcohol, marijuana, and non-prescription drug use before sex, and the number of CAS acts. Participants also completed measures of their substance use frequency. Multilevel modeling in Mplus was used for data analysis, accounting for sexual partnerships nested within participants. All models controlled for PrEP use and relationship status. Results revealed a significant positive association between the frequency of non-prescription drug use before sex and CAS at the partnership level. This indicates that higher non-prescription drug use frequency before sex was associated with a greater number of CAS acts with partners. Moreover, the cross-level interaction between alcohol frequency and non-prescription drug use before sex was statistically significant. Specifically, for participants with high alcohol frequency scores, there was a significant positive association between non-prescription drug use before sex and CAS at the partnership level. AMSM with higher average alcohol consumption were more likely to engage in CAS when using non-prescription drugs prior to sex with a partner, compared to those with lower alcohol consumption. This study's use of multilevel data analysis contributes innovatively to the field by shedding light on how substance use operates within sexual relationships and different partnership dynamics. Tailored interventions targeting substance use should be developed to reduce HIV risk among AMSM.
物质使用是男男性行为青少年感染艾滋病毒的一个重要风险因素。物质使用可能会减少艾滋病毒预防措施的使用,或者增加从事艾滋病毒传播风险更高的活动的可能性,但目前缺乏专门分析青少年和年轻男男性行为者中这些机制的研究。本研究旨在探讨物质使用对大量不同种族的男男性行为青少年无保护肛交(CAS)的影响。此外,我们还研究了个体物质使用的总体水平如何调节性行为前物质使用与伴侣层面 CAS 之间的关联。这项 HIV 预防干预的基线数据是通过 2018 年 4 月至 2020 年 6 月的在线调查从参与者处收集的。样本包括 1624 名男男性行为者(M 年龄,16.69 岁),他们报告在过去 3 个月内至少有一个性伴侣。参与者提供了他们最近三次性伴侣的信息,包括他们与伴侣的关系、PrEP 使用情况、性行为前酒精、大麻和非处方药物使用的频率,以及 CAS 行为的次数。参与者还完成了他们的物质使用频率的测量。Mplus 中的多层次建模用于数据分析,考虑了嵌套在参与者中的性伴侣关系。所有模型均控制了 PrEP 使用和关系状况。结果显示,性行为前非处方药物使用频率与伴侣层面的 CAS 呈显著正相关。这表明,性行为前非处方药物使用频率越高,与伴侣发生的 CAS 行为次数就越多。此外,酒精使用频率与性行为前非处方药物使用频率之间的跨层次交互作用具有统计学意义。具体来说,对于酒精使用频率较高的参与者,性行为前非处方药物使用与伴侣层面的 CAS 呈显著正相关。与酒精使用频率较低的参与者相比,平均酒精摄入量较高的 AMSM 在与伴侣发生性行为前使用非处方药物时更有可能发生 CAS。本研究使用多层次数据分析方法为该领域做出了创新性贡献,揭示了物质使用在性关系和不同伴侣动态中的运作方式。应该制定针对物质使用的针对性干预措施,以降低男男性行为青少年的艾滋病毒风险。