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. 2014 Jul 21;4(7):e005419.
doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005419.

Prescription opioid injection and risk of hepatitis C in relation to traditional drugs of misuse in a prospective cohort of street youth

Affiliations

Prescription opioid injection and risk of hepatitis C in relation to traditional drugs of misuse in a prospective cohort of street youth

Scott E Hadland et al. BMJ Open. .

Abstract

Objective: Despite dramatic increases in the misuse of prescription opioids, the extent to which their intravenous injection places drug users at risk of acquiring hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains unclear. We sought to compare risk of HCV acquisition from injection of prescription opioids to that from other street drugs among high-risk street youth.

Design: Prospective cohort study.

Setting: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada from September 2005 to November 2011.

Participants: The At-Risk Youth Study (ARYS) is a prospective cohort of drug-using adolescents and young adults aged 14-26 years. Participants were recruited through street-based outreach and snowball sampling.

Primary outcome measure: HCV antibody seroconversion, measured every 6 months during follow-up. Risk for seroconversion from injection of prescription opioids was compared with injection of other street drugs of misuse, including heroin, cocaine or crystal methamphetamine, using Cox proportional hazards regression controlling for age, gender and syringe sharing.

Results: Baseline HCV seropositivity was 10.6%. Among 512 HCV-seronegative youth contributing 860.2 person-years of follow-up, 56 (10.9%) seroconverted, resulting in an incidence density of 6.5/100 person-years. In bivariate analyses, prescription opioid injection (HR=3.48; 95% CI 1.57 to 7.70) predicted HCV seroconversion. However, in multivariate modelling, only injection of heroin (adjusted HR=4.56; 95% CI 2.39 to 8.70), cocaine (adjusted HR=1.88; 95% CI 1.00 to 3.54) and crystal methamphetamine (adjusted HR=2.91; 95% CI 1.57 to 5.38) remained independently associated with HCV seroconversion, whereas injection of prescription opioids did not (adjusted HR=0.94; 95% CI 0.40 to 2.21).

Conclusions: Although misuse of prescription opioids is on the rise, traditional street drugs still posed the greatest threat of HCV transmission in this setting. Nonetheless, the high prevalence and incidence of HCV among Canadian street youth underscore the need for evidence-based drug prevention, treatment and harm reduction interventions targeting this vulnerable population.

Keywords: INFECTIOUS DISEASES.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
(A) Cumulative incidence of hepatitis C infection among (A) 512 drug-using youth, by injection heroin use and (B) drug-injecting youth by heroin use: At-Risk Youth Study (ARYS), Vancouver, Canada, 2005–2010.

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