Human immunodeficiency virus prevention for people who use drugs: Overview of reviews and the ICOS of PICOS

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This article summarizes the results from systematic reviews of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention interventions for people who use drugs (PWUD). We performed an overview of reviews, meta-analysis, meta-epidemiology, and PROSPERO Registration CRD42017070117. METHODS: We conducted a comprehensive systematic literature search using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention HIV/AIDS Prevention Research Synthesis Project database to identify quantitative systematic reviews of HIV public heath interventions with PWUD published during 2002-2017. We recombined results of US studies across reviews to quantify effects on HIV infections, continuum of HIV care, sexual risk, and 5 drug-related outcomes (sharing injection equipment, injection frequency, opioid use, general drug use, and participation in drug treatment). We conducted summary meta-analyses separately for reviews of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-experiments. We stratified effects by 5 intervention types: behavioral-psychosocial (BPS), syringe service programs (SSP), opioid agonist therapy (OAT), financial and scheduling incentives (FSI), and case management (CM). RESULTS: We identified 16 eligible reviews includingƒ_.>140 US studies withƒ_.>55ƒ_.000 participants. Summary effects among US studies were significant and favorable for 4 of 5 outcomes measured under RCT (eg, reduced opioid use; odds ratio [OR]ƒ_.=ƒ_.0.70, confidence interval [CI]ƒ_.=ƒ_.0.56-0.89) and all 6 outcomes under quasi-experiments (eg, reduced HIV infection [ORƒ_.=ƒ_.0.42, CIƒ_.=ƒ_.0.27-0.63]; favorable continuum of HIV care [ORƒ_.=ƒ_.0.68, CIƒ_.=ƒ_.0.53-0.88]). Each intervention type showed effectiveness on 1-6 outcomes. Heterogeneity was moderate to none for RCT but moderate to high for quasi-experiments. CONCLUSIONS: Behavioral-psychosocial, SSP, OAT, FSI, and CM interventions are effective in reducing risk of HIV and sequelae of injection and other drug use, and they have a continuing role in addressing the opioid crisis and Ending the HIV Epidemic

Authors

Johnson WD, Rivadeneira N, Adegbite AH, Neumann MS, Mullins MM, Rooks-Peck C, Wichser ME, McDonald CM, Higa DH, Sipe TA

Year

2020

Topics

  • Population(s)
    • People who use drugs
  • Prevention
    • Sexual risk behaviour
    • Drug use behaviours/harm reduction
    • Biomedical interventions
  • Substance Use
    • Nonmedicinal drugs

Link

Abstract/Full paper

Email 1 selected articles

Email 1 selected articles

Error! The email wasn't sent. Please try again.

Your email has been sent!