Sexual transmission of HIV-1 among injection drug users in San Francisco, USA: risk-factor analysis

Many new HIV-1 infections in the USA occur in injection drug users (IDUs). HIV-1 seroconversion of IDUs is mainly associated with injection-related risk factors. Harm-reduction programmes concentrate on injection-risk behaviour. We aimed to establish whether injection or sexual risk factors, or both...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 2001-05, Vol.357 (9266), p.1397-1401
Hauptverfasser: Kral, Alex H, Bluthenthal, Ricky N, Lorvick, Jennifer, Gee, Lauren, Bacchetti, Peter, Edlin, Brian R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many new HIV-1 infections in the USA occur in injection drug users (IDUs). HIV-1 seroconversion of IDUs is mainly associated with injection-related risk factors. Harm-reduction programmes concentrate on injection-risk behaviour. We aimed to establish whether injection or sexual risk factors, or both, were associated with HIV-1 antibody seroconversion of street-recruited IDUs in San Francisco, from 1986 to 1998. IDUs were enrolled every 6 months from four community sites. We did a nested case-control study comparing 58 respondents who seroconverted between visits with 1134 controls who remained seronegative. Controls were matched with cases by sex and date. Adjusted odds ratios and 95% CI were calculated for men and women by use of conditional logistic regression. Men who had sex with men were 8·8 times as likely to seroconvert (95% CI 3·7–20·5) as heterosexual men. Women who reported having traded sex for money in the past year were 5·1 times as likely as others to seroconvert (95% CI 1·9–13·7). Women younger than 40 years were more likely to seroconvert than those 40 years or older (2·8 [1·05–7·6]), and women who reported having a steady sex-partner who injected drugs were less likely to seroconvert than other women (0·32 [0·11–0·92]). HIV-1 seroconversion of street-recruited IDUs in San Francisco is strongly associated with sexual behaviour. HIV-1 risk might be reduced by incorporation of innovative sexual-risk-reduction strategies into harm-reduction programmes.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)04562-1