Title of article :
HIV incidence among injecting drug users in New York City syringe-exchange programmes
Author/Authors :
Don C Des Jarlais، نويسنده , , Michael Marmor، نويسنده , , Denise Paone، نويسنده , , Stephen Titus، نويسنده , , Qiuhu Shi، نويسنده , , Theresa Perlis، نويسنده , , Benny Jose، نويسنده , , Samuel R. Friedman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Background
There have been no studies showing that participation in programmes which provide legal access to drug-injection equipment leads to individual-level protection against incident HIV infection. We have compared HIV incidence among injecting drug users participating in syringe-exchange programmes in New York City with that among non-participants.
Methods
We used meta-analytic techniques to combine HIV incidence data from injecting drug users in three studies: the Syringe Exchange Evaluation (n=280), in which multiple interviews and saliva samples were collected from participants at exchange sites; the Vaccine Preparedness Initiative cohort (n=133 continuing exchangers and 188 non-exchangers, in which participants were interviewed and tested for HIV every 3 months; and very-high-seroprevalence cities in the National AIDS Demonstration Research (NADR) programme (n=1029), in which street-recruited individuals were interviewed and tested for HIV every 6 months. In practice, participants in the NADR study had not used syringe exchanges.
Findings
HIV incidence among continuing exchange-users in the Syringe Exchange Evaluation was 1•58 per 100 person-years at risk (95% CI 0•54, 4•65) and among continuing exchange-users in the Vaccine Preparedness Initiative it was 1•38 per 100 person-years at risk (0•23, 4•57). Incidence among non-users of the exchange in the Vaccine Preparedness Initiative was 5 26 per 100 person-years at risk (2•41, 11•49), and in the NADR cities, 6•23 per 100 person-years at risk (4•4, 8•6). In a pooled-data, multivariate proportional-hazards analysis, not using the exchanges was associated with a hazard ratio of 3 35 (95% CI 1•29, 8•65) for incident HIV infection compared with using the exchanges.
Interpretation
We observed an individual-level protective effect against HIV infection associated with participation in a syringe-exchange programme. Sterile injection equipment should be legally provided to reduce the risk of HIV infection in persons who inject illicit drugs.
Journal title :
The Lancet
Journal title :
The Lancet