Patterns of Drug and Alcohol Use and Injection Equipment Sharing Among People With Recent Injecting Drug Use or Receiving Opioid Agonist Treatment During and Following Hepatitis C Virus Treatment With Direct-acting Antiviral Therapies: An International Study

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Artenie, Andreea A | Cunningham, Evan B | Dore, Gregory J | Conway, Brian | Dalgard, Olav | Powis, Jeff | Bruggmann, Philip | Hellard, Margaret | Cooper, Curtis | Read, Philip | Feld, Jordan J | Hajarizadeh, Behzad | Amin, Janaki | Lacombe, Karine | Stedman, Catherine | Litwin, Alain H | Marks, Pip | Matthews, Gail V | Quiene, Sophie | Erratt, Amanda | Bruneau, Julie | Grebely, Jason

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

International audience. Abstract Background In many settings, recent or prior injection drug use remains a barrier to accessing direct-acting antiviral treatment (DAA) for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. We examined patterns of drug and alcohol use and injection equipment sharing among people with recent injecting drug use or receiving opioid agonist treatment (OAT) during and following DAA-based treatment. Methods SIMPLIFY and D3FEAT are phase 4 trials evaluating the efficacy of DAA among people with past 6-month injecting drug use or receiving OAT through a network of 25 international sites. Enrolled in 2016\textendash 2017, participants received sofosbuvir/velpatasvir (SIMPLIFY) or paritaprevir/ritonavir/dasabuvir/ombitasvir ± ribavirin (D3FEAT) for 12 weeks and completed behavioral questionnaires before, during, and up to 2 years posttreatment. The impact of time in HCV treatment and follow-up on longitudinally measured longitudinally measured behaviors was estimated using generalized estimating equations. Results At screening, of 190 participants (mean age, 47 years; 74% male), 62% reported any past-month injecting 16% past-month injection equipment sharing, and 61% current OAT. Median alcohol use was 2 (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test\textendash Consumption; range, 1\textendash 12). During follow-up, opioid injecting (odds ratio [OR], 0.95; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.92\textendash 0.99) and sharing (OR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.80\textendash 0.94) decreased, whereas no significant changes were observed for stimulant injecting (OR, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.94\textendash 1.02) or alcohol use (OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.95\textendash 1.04). Conclusions Injecting drug use and risk behaviors remained stable or decreased following DAA-based HCV treatment. Findings further support expanding HCV treatment to all, irrespective of injection drug use. Clinical Trials Registration SIMPLIFY, NCT02336139; D3FEAT, NCT02498015.

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