26 results on '"McFall, Allison M"'
Search Results
2. Substance use is associated with condomless anal intercourse among men who have sex with men in India: a partner-level analysis
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Prabhu, Sandeep, Mehta, Shruti H., McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Lucas, Gregory M., Celentano, David D., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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- 2022
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3. COVID-19 impact on index testing services and programmatic cost in 5 high HIV prevalence Indian districts
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Pollard, Rose, Enugu, Ajay, Sriudomporn, Salin, Bell, Jade, Ghosh, Subash Chandra, Arumugam, Visvanathan, Mugundu, Parthasarathy, Singh, Aditya, McFall, Allison M., Mehta, Shruti H., Patenaude, Bryan N., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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- 2022
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4. Persistently high HIV incidence among men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs attending integrated care centres in India: a longitudinal assessment of clinic‐based data.
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McFall, Allison M., Gunaratne, Mihili P., Ganapathi, Lakshmi, Srikrishnan, A. K., Vasudevan, C. K., Anand, Santhanam, Celentano, David D., Solomon, Sunil S., Mehta, Shruti H., and Lucas, Gregory M.
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OPIOID abuse , *MEDICAL care , *DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *MEN who have sex with men , *SEXUAL minorities , *PRE-exposure prophylaxis - Abstract
Introduction: Globally, there have been significant declines in HIV incidence over the past two decades, but this decline is slowing, and in some settings, declines have stalled or are growing—particularly where epidemics are concentrated in key populations (KPs). Understanding temporal changes in HIV incidence among KP is critical yet, due to logistical constraints, there are few sources of longitudinal incidence data, particularly among KP. Methods: We present HIV incidence rates from June 2014 to December 2022 among cisgender men who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID) attending community‐based integrated care centres (ICCs) in 15 Indian cities. ICCs, established between 2014 and 2017, provide HIV testing and other services to MSM (eight sites) or PWID (eight sites). Client HIV testing data were included in the analysis if they had ≥2 tests and were not positive on the first test. We calculated incidence rates per 100 person‐years (PY), stratified by KP, city/site and year. Poisson regression explored associations of incidence with time, age, gender (PWID only) and ICC use. Results: From June 2014 to December 2022, 13,501 clients (5722 MSM, 7779 PWID) had ≥2 HIV tests over a median of 1.8 years. There were a total of 1093 incident HIV acquisitions. Overall incidence rates for MSM and PWID were 1.9/100 PY (95% CI: 1.7−2.2) and 4.1 (3.9−4.4), respectively. Among MSM sites, incidence ranged from 0.4 to 3.5 and in PWID sites from 0.6 to 17.9. From adjusted models, incidence increased by 17% annually among MSM. Among PWID, incidence increased by 11% annually up until 2020 and then decreased by 29% after 2020; when excluding the outlier of New Delhi, incidence was stable among PWID. MSM and PWID 21−25 years old had the highest risk of HIV and among PWID, those more consistently engaged in medication for opioid use disorder were at the lowest risk. Conclusions: While there was substantial geographic variability, MSM and PWID engaged in a free community‐based clinic experienced persistently high HIV incidence (>2/100 PY). KP in low‐ and middle‐income countries should be a focus when considering novel strategies such as long‐acting pre‐exposure prophylaxis to curtail incidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. HIV self‐testing in India: implementation and qualitative evaluation of a web‐based programme with virtual counsellor support.
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Kaptchuk, Rose Pollard, Thakker, Jalpa, Bell, Jade, Okram, Saya, Gopinath, Usha, Mehta, Shruti H., Reddy, Ajay Kumar, Loeb, Talia A., Arumugam, Visvanathan, Tandon, Samit, Parthasarathy, Mugundu Ramien, Ghosh, Subash Chandra, Singh, Aditya, Joshi, Deepika Srivastava, Kaur, Sukhvinder, Solomon, Sunil Suhas, and McFall, Allison M.
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HIV testing kits ,PATIENT self-monitoring ,DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,COUNSELORS ,DIAGNOSTIC services ,MENTAL health counselors - Abstract
Introduction: To achieve epidemic control of infectious diseases, engaging higher‐burden populations with accessible diagnostic services is critical. HIV self‐testing (HIVST) is a promising option. Methods: We implemented an online HIVST programme for key populations across India. Eligible clients were 18 years or older, self‐reported a negative or unknown HIV status and reported not taking antiretroviral therapy. Clients who reported a prior HIV diagnosis were not eligible to receive an HIVST kit. HIVST clients received kits via courier or in person at pre‐determined pick‐up points supported by trained counselling staff. Virtual counsellors engaged clients online and by phone and offered support to register, access, and complete HIVST free of cost. Virtual counsellors supported clients to report results and engage with follow‐up services. Follow‐up included linking clients with a positive result to confirmatory testing and HIV care services. We assessed programmatic data across HIV continuum outcomes and conducted a qualitative evaluation through interviews with purposively sampled clients. Results: Between 30 June 2021 and 30 September 2022, 5324 clients ordered an HIVST kit (76% men, 13% women, 7% transgender people, 4% unknown gender). Of the 4282 clients reporting results (94% of those who received a kit), 6% screened positive, among whom 72% (n = 184) completed confirmatory testing. Themes from 41 client interviews included satisfaction about the convenience and privacy of services and the discreet nature of kit delivery. Respondents were drawn to the convenience of HIVST and appreciated gaining courage and comfort throughout the process from virtual counsellor support. For respondents who screened positive, challenges to care linkage included fearing judgemental questions from public providers and wanting more time before starting treatment. Clients shared concerns about kit accuracy and suggested that instructional materials be provided with more diverse language options. Conclusions: Web‐based HIVST services with tailored support appeared to facilitate HIV service access and engagement of harder‐to‐reach populations across India. Assistance from a community‐oriented counsellor proved important to overcome literacy barriers and mistrust in order to support the HIVST process and service linkage. Learnings can inform global efforts to improve the critical step of diagnosis in achieving epidemic control for HIV and other infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. High prevalence of hepatitis B virus among MSM living with HIV in India.
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Iqbal, Hussain Syed, Gunaratne, Mihili P., Loeb, Talia A., Pradeep, Amrose, McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Anderson, Mark, Rodgers, Mary A., Celentano, David D., Mehta, Shruti H., Clohertly, Gavin A., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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DISEASE prevalence ,HEPATITIS associated antigen ,HEPATITIS B virus ,HIV ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEASONAL employment ,HEPATITIS B - Abstract
People living with HIV (PWH) have been shown to bear a higher burden of hepatitis B virus (HBV) due to shared routes and risk factors for transmission. Populations such as men who have sex with men (MSM) are at an increased risk of both being infected with HBV and HIV, that places them at higher risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. Using weighted and adjusted multilevel logistic regression, we characterized the prevalence and correlates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) among MSM living with HIV across 12 Indian cities from 2012 to 2013. Overall, the prevalence of HBsAg was 8% (range across cities: 0.5%–19%). Being between the ages of 25–34, and 35–44 increased the odds of having chronic HBV infection compared to MSM 24 years or younger. Daily or seasonal employment and being unemployed increased the odds of HBsAg prevalence compared to those with monthly or weekly wages. Sexual risk behaviours such as having had sex with both men and women in the prior 6 months and history of sex work increased the odds of having HBV. Ever having insertive sex with a man or hijra (assigned male at birth, currently identifies as female/nonbinary) was negatively associated with HBV. Despite the existence of efficacious vaccines, HBV continues to have high prevalence among PWHs. Programmes to increase early screening, vaccinations and HBV literacy are urgently needed. Integrating HBV and HIV programmes for MSM populations could be critical in addressing this dual burden and improving outcomes for both infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Changes in HIV care continuum indicators among community-based samples of HIV-infected people who inject drugs and men who have sex with men across 21 cities in India.
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Prata Menezes, Neia S., Solomon, Sunil S., McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Kumar, M. Suresh, Celentano, David D., Mehta, Shruti H., and Lucas, Gregory M.
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HIV infection epidemiology ,HIV-positive persons ,NEEDLE sharing ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,CROSS-sectional method ,REGRESSION analysis ,CONTINUUM of care ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,INFECTION control ,HARM reduction ,SEXUAL minorities ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Monitoring key populations' progress towards UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets is essential to achieving HIV/AIDS epidemic control. Using serial cross-sectional data, we evaluated changes in HIV care continuum among people who inject drugs(PWID) and men who have sex with men(MSM) in India. Cross-sectional baseline (2012/2013) and follow-up (2016/2017) samples were recruited using respondent-driven sampling across 21 cities. All participants were tested for HIV and RNA measured in HIV-positive participants. Linear regression was used to model temporal site-level changes in continuum indicators in MSM versus PWID. At baseline, we recruited 2,544 HIV-infected PWID and 1,086 HIV-infected MSM. At follow-up, we recruited 2,517 HIV-infected PWID and 1,763 HIV-infected MSM. At baseline, there were no significant differences in continuum indicators between MSM and PWID. At follow-up, compared to PWID, the proportion of MSM reaching each care continuum indicator—awareness of status, receipt of care, ART use, viral suppression—increased by 15-33 percentage points: 78% of MSM versus 49% of PWID were aware of their status (p < 0.01); 56% of MSM versus 32% of PWID were virologically suppressed (p = 0.05). MSM showed marked improvements across the care continuum, whereas PWID lagged and may require additional intervention. Differential improvement in HIV engagement may necessitate population-specific interventions and routine surveillance to facilitate HIV elimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Diverse Rates of Depression Among Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) Across India: Insights from a Multi-site Mixed Method Study
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Tomori, Cecilia, McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Mehta, Shruti H., Solomon, Sunil S., Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Solomon, Suniti, and Celentano, David D.
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- 2016
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9. Antiretroviral Drug Resistance in HIV Sequences From People Who Inject Drugs and Men Who Have Sex With Men Across 21 Cities in India.
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Clipman, Steven J, Solomon, Sunil S, Srikrishnan, Aylur K, McFall, Allison M, Gomathi, Selvamurthi, Saravanan, Shanmugam, Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K, Kumar, Muniratnam S, Celentano, David D, Mehta, Shruti H, and Lucas, Gregory M
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REVERSE transcriptase inhibitors ,DRUG resistance ,NUCLEOSIDE reverse transcriptase inhibitors ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,ANTI-HIV agents - Abstract
Background Drug resistance testing is limited in public-sector human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care in India, and there are few systematic samplings for prevalent drug resistance mutations (DRMs), particularly among men who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID). Methods We conducted genotypic resistance testing on 915 HIV sequences sampled from viremic self-reported antiretroviral therapy (ART) experienced and naive PWID and MSM recruited from 21 cities across India in 2016–2017. We analyzed factors associated with resistance using logistic regression and evaluated evidence for transmitted resistance using phylogenetic analyses. Results Of the 915 participants sequenced, median age was 31, 436 were MSM, and 191 were ART experienced. Overall, 62.8% of ART-experienced participants and 14.4% of ART-naive participants were found to have low-level resistance or higher to 1 or more classes of drugs. Prevalence of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate resistance was 25.7% in ART-experienced participants and 1.11% in ART-naive participants. The highest proportion of drug resistance was seen across nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, and resistance was significantly more common among MSM participants than PWID. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that 54.6% of ART-naive participants with resistance who clustered had shared DRMs, suggesting transmitted resistance may have occurred. Conclusions Patients experiencing virologic failure on first-line therapy switched blindly to tenofovir/lamivudine/dolutegravir may effectively be receiving dolutegravir monotherapy due to resistance to tenofovir and lamivudine. While dolutegravir is expected to have full activity in the majority of patients in India, follow-up is needed to understand how resistance may affect long-term outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on HIV prevention and care services among key populations across 15 cities in India: a longitudinal assessment of clinic‐based data.
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McFall, Allison M., Menezes, Neia Prata, Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Solomon, Sunil S., Anand, Santhanam, Baishya, Jiban J., Lucas, Gregory M., Celentano, David D., and Mehta, Shruti H.
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HIV prevention , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *PRE-exposure prophylaxis , *MEN who have sex with men , *REPRODUCTIVE health services - Abstract
Introduction: The COVID‐19 pandemic has threatened to diminish gains in HIV epidemic control and impacts are likely most profound among key populations in resource‐limited settings. We aimed to understand the pandemic's impact on HIV‐related service utilization among men who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID) across India. Methods: Beginning in 2013, we established integrated care centres (ICCs) which provide HIV preventive and treatment services to MSM and PWID across 15 Indian sites. We examined utilization patterns for an 18‐month period covering 2 months preceding the pandemic (January–February 2020) and over the first and second COVID‐19 waves in India (March 2020–June 2021). We assessed: (1) unique clients accessing any ICC service, (2) ICC services provided, (3) unique clients tested for HIV and (4) HIV diagnoses and test positivity. Among an established cohort of PWID/MSM living with HIV (PLHIV), we administered a survey on the pandemic's impact on HIV care and treatment (June–August 2020). Results: Overall, 13,854 unique clients visited an ICC from January 2020 to June 2021. In January/February 2020, the average monthly number of clients was 3761. Compared to pre‐pandemic levels, the number of clients receiving services declined sharply in March 2020, dropping to 25% of pre‐pandemic levels in April/May 2020 (first wave), followed by a slow rebound until April/May 2021 (second wave), when there was a 57% decline. HIV testing followed a similar trajectory. HIV test positivity changed over time, declining in the first wave and reaching its nadir around July 2020 at ∼50% of pre‐pandemic levels. Positivity then increased steadily, eventually becoming higher than pre‐pandemic periods. The second wave was associated with a decline in positivity for MSM but was relatively unchanged for PWID. Among 1650 PLHIV surveyed, 52% of PWID and 45% of MSM reported the pandemic impacted their ability to see an HIV provider. MSM had barriers accessing sexually transmitted infection testing and partner HIV testing. Conclusions: The COVID‐19 pandemic led to significant decreases in HIV‐related service utilization among key populations in India. This presents an opportunity for increased transmission and patients presenting with advanced disease among groups already disproportionately impacted by HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. HIV service delivery in the time of COVID‐19: focus group discussions with key populations in India.
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Pollard, Rose, Gopinath, Usha, Reddy, Yeruva A., Kumar, Bogam R., Mugundu, Parthasarathy, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Singh, Aditya, McFall, Allison M., Mayer, Kenneth H., Mehta, Shruti H., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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COVID-19 ,FOCUS groups ,ANTIBODY titer ,HIV ,HIV-positive persons - Abstract
Introduction: There are limited data on the impact of COVID‐19‐associated disruptions and novel HIV service delivery strategies among key populations (KPs) in low‐ and middle‐income countries. In March 2020, in response to COVID‐19, the Government of India revised HIV service delivery policies to include community antiretroviral therapy (ART) distribution and multi‐month dispensing (MMD) of ART for all people living with HIV (PLHIV). Methods: To assess the acceptability of these adaptations and impact of the pandemic among KPs, we conducted focus groups in November–December 2020 with purposively sampled men who have sex with men (MSM), female sex workers (FSWs) and transgender women (TGW) in Telangana and Maharashtra. Seven discussions were conducted. Topics included HIV service access, risk behaviours, economic security and feedback to ensure service continuity. Inductive coding identified themes across topics. Results: Forty‐four individuals aged 20–49 years participated in discussions (13 MSM; 16 FSW; and 15 TGW). Twenty‐four participants self‐identified as living with HIV. People not living with HIV reported challenges in accessing HIV antibody testing at hospitals due to travel restrictions and fear of contracting COVID‐19. Participants accessed HIV antibody testing using transportation arranged by community‐based organizations after lockdowns eased. PLHIV reported uninterrupted ART refills and generally consistent adherence; however, there were experiences of delayed CD4 and HIV RNA testing. Participants shared appreciation for MMD as it saved time, money, and reduced exposure to COVID‐19. Participants expressed gratitude for home deliveries which enabled ART access, yet shared concerns about home‐based services causing confidentiality breaches with family/neighbours. Participants voiced preferences for community‐based service provision due to proximity, convenient hours, and welcoming environments compared to public hospitals. Other requests included support for income, employment, nutrient‐rich food and more accessible mental health, HIV, and other health services. Conclusions: COVID‐19 restrictions had a greater impact on access to HIV antibody, CD4, and RNA testing services compared to ART access. High acceptance of MMD and community‐based services support the continued role of differentiated service delivery models to improve KP access to HIV antibody, CD4, RNA testing services, convenient ART retrieval, and integrated services beyond HIV, which may be critical for survival and wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Is there synergy in syndemics? Psychosocial conditions and sexual risk among men who have sex with men in India.
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Tomori, Cecilia, McFall, Allison M., Solomon, Sunil S., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Anand, Santhanam, Balakrishnan, P., Mehta, Shruti H., and Celentano, David D.
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SEXUALLY transmitted disease risk factors , *ALCOHOLISM , *CHILD abuse , *MENTAL depression , *DRUGS of abuse , *EVALUATION of medical care , *NURSING models , *POPULATION , *DISEASE management , *SOCIAL attitudes , *INTIMATE partner violence , *MEN who have sex with men - Abstract
Syndemic theory describes the clustering and synergistic interaction of disease driven by contextual and social factors, which worsen health outcomes for a population, and has been applied to men who have sex with men (MSM) and their risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. Recent reviews, however, have critiqued prevailing approaches in syndemic studies that assess only additive associations without evaluation of synergy. Following these suggestions, we compared the traditional additive approach with a test for synergistic association of 5 syndemic conditions (alcohol dependence, illicit drug use, depression, intimate partner violence (IPV), and childhood sexual abuse (CSA)) with unprotected anal intercourse (UAI) and active syphilis infection among 11,771 MSM recruited through respondent driven sampling from 12 cities in India. UAI was assessed via self-report and active syphilis infection was diagnosed by RPR and THPA tests. An additive association was explored using a condition count (range 0–5), and synergy was tested using relative excess risk due to interactions (RERIs) calculated from all 2-way and common 3-way interactions between conditions in adjusted regression models. There was a significant dose response associated with the syndemic count and UAI, and a similar pattern for syphilis, though not statistically significant. RERIs showed synergy for only one pair of conditions for UAI and syphilis, respectively: IPV + depression and alcohol dependence + illicit drug use. In this study, we found an additive association between syndemic conditions and UAI with evidence of synergistic interaction between a pair of psychosocial conditions, and no significant additive association, but a synergistic interaction between another pair of psychosocial conditions for syphilis. Our results lend further support to a critical reassessment of syndemic analyses. Closer attention to the cumulative development, underlying causal pathways, and possible synergistic interaction of co-occurring epidemics through combined qualitative and quantitative methodologies may yield more effective interventions for vulnerable, marginalized populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Respondent-driven sampling is more efficient than facility-based strategies at identifying undiagnosed people who inject drugs living with HIV in India.
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McFall, Allison M., Solomon, Sunil S., Lau, Bryan, Latkin, Carl, Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Kumar, Muniratnam Suresh, Lucas, Gregory M., and H. Mehta, Shruti
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ANTI-HIV agents , *DRUG abuse , *DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *CITIES & towns , *MEDICAL screening - Abstract
Injection drug use drives HIV epidemics in many low-resource settings, yet many people who inject drugs (PWID) living with HIV are not diagnosed. We assessed the ability of respondent-driven sampling (RDS) – which uses peer network connections – to identify undiagnosed PWID living with HIV compared to a facility-based strategy in India. In six Indian cities from 2014 to 2017, integrated care centers (ICCs) provided HIV testing. From 2016 to 2017, RDS samples of PWID in these same cities were conducted. Using biometric matching, characteristics associated with identification by RDS only and both RDS and ICC, compared to ICC only were explored. Undiagnosed individuals tested positive and did not report a prior diagnosis. The number needed to recruit (NNR) (average number recruited to find one undiagnosed PWID living with HIV) and the identification rate (average number undiagnosed PWID identified per week) assessed the efficiency of RDS vs. ICCs. There were 10,759 ICC clients and 6012 RDS participants; 40% of RDS participants were also ICC clients resulting in 14,397 unduplicated PWID. PWID identified by RDS vs. ICC only were more likely to be male (adjusted odds ratios [aOR] RDS only: 6.8, both: 2.7) and living with HIV but undiagnosed (aOR RDS only: 2.5, both: 1.5). Overall, the RDS NNR was 11 and the ICC NNR was 26. The RDS identification rate (18.6/week) was faster than the ICC identification rate (2.7/week) overall and in all cities. RDS required screening fewer PWID and more rapidly identified undiagnosed PWID living with HIV as compared to ICCs. • Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) finds different sub-groups of people who inject drugs (PWID) compared to a facility. • RDS screened fewer PWID to find one undiagnosed PWID with HIV compared to a facility. • RDS more rapidly found undiagnosed PWID with HIV compared to a facility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Integration of a geospatially targeted community-based testing approach with respondent-driven sampling to identify people who inject drugs living with HIV and HCV in Patti and Gorakhpur, India.
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Loeb, Talia A., McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Mehta, Shruti H., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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ANTI-HIV agents , *HIV infections , *VIRAL load , *HEPATITIS C , *DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections - Abstract
Respondent-driven sampling (RDS), a network recruitment approach, is effective at reaching people who inject drugs (PWID), but other strategies may be needed to reach PWID at risk or living with HIV and/or Hepatitis C (HCV). We examined the impact of integrating geospatially targeted community-based HIV/HCV testing with an RDS survey. PWID were recruited between 2019 and 2021 in Patti and Gorakhpur, India, in a two-phased approach for identifying PWID living with HIV/HCV. Phase 1 was an RDS survey, in which participants reported injection venues. Venues with the highest prevalence of HIV/HCV viremia were selected for Phase 2: community-based testing. All participants underwent rapid HIV and HCV testing and viral load quantification. Using Pearson's chi-squared test, two-sided exact significance tests, and t-tests, we compared prevalence and identification rates for each of the primary outcomes: the number of PWID 1) living with HIV/HCV, 2) undiagnosed, and 3) viremic. Both approaches identified large numbers of PWID (n∼500 each; N=2011) who were living with HIV/HCV and had transmission potential (i.e., detectable viremia). The community-based approach identified a higher proportion of individuals living with HCV (76.4% vs. 69.6% in Gorakhpur and 36.3% vs. 29.0% in Patti). Community-based testing was also faster at identifying PWID with detectable HIV viremia. Both approaches identified PWID with varying demographic characteristics. Community-based testing was more efficient than RDS overall, but both may be required to reach PWID of varying characteristics. Surveillance should collect data on injection venues to facilitate community-based testing and maximize case identification. • Reaching all PWID living with HIV/HCV with programs is critical to achieving HIV/HCV programmatic targets. • Geospatially targeted community-based testing is an efficient way to identify PWID with undiagnosed HIV and HCV infection. • Multiple complementary approaches (e.g., network-driven and targeted field-based testing) may be required to reach all PWID. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Respondent-driven sampling for identification of HIV- and HCV-infected people who inject drugs and men who have sex with men in India: A cross-sectional, community-based analysis.
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Solomon, Sunil S., McFall, Allison M., Lucas, Gregory M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Kumar, Muniratnam S., Anand, Santhanam, Quinn, Thomas C., Celentano, David D., and Mehta, Shruti H.
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *HEPATITIS C diagnosis , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *MEN who have sex with men , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *DISEASES , *HIV infection epidemiology , *INTRAVENOUS drug abuse , *HEPATITIS C , *HEPATITIS viruses , *HIV infections , *HOMOSEXUALITY , *MEDICAL care research , *PUBLIC relations , *RESEARCH funding , *DISEASE prevalence , *CROSS-sectional method , *SEXUAL partners , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: A major barrier to achieving ambitious targets for global control of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) is low levels of awareness of infection among key populations such as men who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID). We explored the potential of a strategy routinely used for surveillance in these groups, respondent-driven sampling (RDS), to be used as an intervention to identify HIV- and HCV-infected PWID and MSM who are unaware of their status and those who are viremic across 26 Indian cities at various epidemic stages.Methods and Findings: Data were collected as part of the baseline assessment of an ongoing cluster-randomized trial. RDS was used to accrue participants at 27 sites (15 PWID sites and 12 MSM sites) selected to reflect varying stages of the HIV epidemic among MSM and PWID in India. A total of 56 seeds recruited a sample of 26,447 persons (approximately 1,000 participants per site) between October 1, 2012, and December 19, 2013. Across MSM sites (n = 11,997), the median age was 25 years and the median number of lifetime male partners was 8. Across PWID sites (n = 14,450), 92.4% were male, the median age was 30 years, and 87.5% reported injection in the prior 6 months. RDS identified 4,051 HIV-infected persons, of whom 2,325 (57.4%) were unaware of their HIV infection and 2,816 (69.5%) were HIV viremic. It also identified 5,777 HCV-infected persons, of whom 5,337 (92.4%) were unaware that they were infected with HCV and 4,728 (81.8%) were viremic. In the overall sample (both MSM and PWID), the prevalence of HIV-infected persons who were unaware of their status increased with sampling depth, from 7.9% in participants recruited in waves 1 through 5 to 12.8% among those recruited in waves 26 and above (p-value for trend < 0.001). The overall detection rate of people unaware of their HIV infection was 0.5 persons per day, and the detection rate of HIV-infected persons with viremia (regardless of their awareness status) was 0.7 per day. The detection rate of HIV viremic individuals was positively associated with underlying HIV prevalence and the prevalence of HIV viremia (linear regression coefficient per 1-percentage-point increase in prevalence: 0.05 and 0.07, respectively). The median detection rate of PWID who were unaware of their HCV infection was 2.5 per day. The cost of identifying 1 unaware HIV-infected individual ranged from US$51 to US$2,072 across PWID sites and from US$189 to US$5,367 across MSM sites. The mean additional cost of identifying 1 unaware HCV-infected PWID was US$13 (site range: US$7-US$140). Limitations of the study include the exclusivity of study sites to India, lack of prior HIV/HCV diagnosis confirmation with clinic records, and lack of cost data from other case-finding approaches commonly used in India.Conclusions: In this study, RDS was able to rapidly identify at nominal cost a substantial number of unaware and viremic HIV-infected and HCV-infected individuals who were currently not being reached by existing programs and who were at high risk for transmission. Combining RDS (or other network-driven recruitment approaches) with strategies focused on linkage to care, particularly in high-burden settings, may be a viable option for achieving the 90-90-90 targets in key populations in resource-limited settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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16. Epidemiology of HIV and hepatitis C infection among women who inject drugs in Northeast India: a respondent-driven sampling study.
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McFall, Allison M., Solomon, Sunil S., Lucas, Greg M., Celentano, David D., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Kumar, Muniratnam S., and Mehta, Shruti H.
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HIV infection epidemiology , *HEPATITIS C , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *INDIAN women (Asians) , *WOMEN & drugs , *HEALTH , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SEX distribution , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *CROSS-sectional method , *CHRONIC hepatitis C , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background and aims Despite extensive research on HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) among people who inject drugs (PWID), there remains a gap in knowledge on the burden among women who inject drugs and their unique contexts and risk factors. This analysis compares HIV and HCV prevalence in female and male PWID and estimates injection and sexual risk correlates of prevalent HIV and HCV infection among women in Northeast India. Design Cross-sectional sample accrued using respondent-driven sampling. Setting Seven cities in Northeast India, 2013. Participants A total of 6457 adult PWID. Measurements Participants completed an interviewer-administered survey. HIV infection was diagnosed on-site and HCV antibody testing was performed on stored specimens. HIV and HCV prevalence estimates were stratified by gender. Among women, the association of risk correlates with HIV and HCV were estimated using multi-level logistic regression models. Findings A total of 796 (15.9%) of the PWID were women, of whom 52.9% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 49.3-56.5%] were HIV-infected and 22.3% (CI = 19.9-24.7%) were HCV-infected. HIV and HCV prevalence among men was 17.4% (CI = 16.9-24.7%) and 30.4% (CI = 31.2-32.0%), respectively. Among women, correlates of HIV were widowhood [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) versus currently married = 4.03, CI = 2.13-7.60] and a higher number of life-time sexual partners (aOR ≥8 versus none = 3.08, CI = 1.07-8.86). Correlates of HCV were longer injection duration (aOR per 10 years = 1.70, CI = 1.25-2.27), injecting only heroin and a combination of drugs (aOR versus pharmaceuticals only = 5.63, CI = 1.68-18.9 and aOR = 2.58, CI = 1.60-4.16, respectively), sharing needles/syringes (aOR = 2.46, CI = 1.29-4.56) and a larger PWID network (aOR ≥ 51 versus 1-5 = 4.17, CI = 2.43-7.17). Conclusions Women who inject drugs in Northeast India have a high HIV prevalence, which was more than double their hepatitis C (HCV) prevalence, an opposite pattern than is observed typically among male PWID. HIV infection is associated with sexual risk factors while injection-related behaviors appear to drive HCV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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17. Gender Differences in Factors Related to HIV Risk Behaviors among People Who Inject Drugs in North-East India.
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Sabri, Bushra, McFall, Allison M., Solomon, Sunil S., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Anand, Santhanam, Celentano, David D., Mehta, Shruti H., Kumar, Suresh, and Lucas, Gregory M.
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HIV infection risk factors , *INTRAVENOUS drug abuse , *SEX factors in disease , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
People who inject drugs (PWID) in India are at high risk for HIV, with women being at elevated risk. Using a socio-ecological framework, this study assessed whether factors associated with HIV transmission risk behaviors differed across men and women PWID. Data for this cross-sectional study were collected from 6449 PWID in 7 cities in Northeast India. Men (n = 5653) and women (n = 796) PWID were recruited using respondent-driven sampling (RDS). We assessed sex differences in two recent HIV transmission risk behaviors: multiple sex partners and needle/syringe sharing. We used multi-level logistic regression models, which incorporated sampling weights and random intercepts for city, to assess factors associated with these HIV risks, separately among men and women. The prevalence of HIV was significantly higher among women than men (53% vs 18.4%, p<0.01). Nearly 13% of men and 8% of women (p = .30) had multiple partners. Employment in men and relationship status and stigma in women were significantly associated with multiple partners. Approximately 25% of men and 19% of women engaged in needle sharing (p = .16). Younger age in women and depression symptoms in men were significantly associated with increased risk for sharing needles. We found that sexual and drug related risk behaviors were common among PWID in Northeast India, and there were differences between men and women in the socio-ecologic correlates of these behaviors. Contextually-integrated and gender-specific HIV prevention and intervention efforts are needed that consider factors at individual, interpersonal- and community-levels that uniquely impact HIV risks among PWID. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. Buprenorphine treatment receipt characteristics and retention among people who inject drugs at Integrated Care Centers in India.
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Ganapathi, Lakshmi, McFall, Allison M., Greco, Kimberly F., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Kumar, Muniratnam Suresh, Mayer, Kenneth H., O'Cleirigh, Conall, Mehta, Shruti H., Lucas, Gregory M., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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BUPRENORPHINE , *INTEGRATIVE medicine , *OPIOID epidemic , *CITIES & towns , *DRUGS - Abstract
India is facing overlapping opioid injection and HIV epidemics among people who inject drugs (PWID) in several cities. Integrated Care Centers (ICCs) provide single-venue HIV and substance use services to PWID. We evaluated PWID engagement in daily observed buprenorphine treatment at 7 ICCs to inform interventions. We analyzed 1-year follow-up data for PWID initiating buprenorphine between 1 January – 31 December 2018, evaluating receipt frequency, treatment interruptions (no buprenorphine receipt for 60 consecutive days with subsequent re-engagement), and drop-out (no buprenorphine receipt for 60 consecutive days without re-engagement). Using descriptive statistics, we explored differences between ICCs in the opioid-endemic Northeast region and ICCs in the emerging opioid epidemic North/Central region. We used a multivariable logistic regression model to determine predictors of treatment drop-out by 6 months. 1312 PWID initiated buprenorphine (76% North/Central ICCs vs. 24% Northeast ICCs). 31% of PWID in North/Central, and 25% in Northeast ICCs experienced ≥ 1 treatment interruption in 1 year. Over 6 months, 48% of PWID in North/Central vs. 60% in Northeast ICCs received buprenorphine ≤ 2 times/week (p < 0.0001). A third of PWID in North/Central vs. half in Northeast ICCs experienced treatment drop-out by 6 months (p < 0.001). In the multivariable model, living in Northeast cities was associated with increased odds of drop-out while counseling receipt was associated with decreased odds. Retention among PWID initiating buprenorphine at ICCs was comparable to global reports. However, regional heterogeneity in retention, and low daily buprenorphine receipt suggest patient-centered interventions adapted to regional contexts are urgently needed. • 62% of PWID initiating buprenorphine at ICCs were retained in treatment at 6 months. • Daily buprenorphine receipt was low, with 50% of PWID receiving medications on average at a frequency of ≤ 2 times a week. • 30% of PWID experienced ≥ 1 treatment interruption. • Living in Northeast cities was associated with increased odds of treatment drop-out by 6 months. • Receipt of counseling was associated with decreased odds of treatment drop-out by 6 months. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Design of the Indian NCA study (Indian national collaboration on AIDS): a cluster randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness of integrated care centers to improve HIV outcomes among men who have sex with men and persons who inject drugs in India.
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Solomon, Sunil S., Lucas, Gregory M., Celentano, David D., McFall, Allison M., Ogburn, Elizabeth, Moulton, Lawrence H., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Kumar, M. Suresh, Anand, Santhanam, Solomon, Suniti, and Mehta, Shruti H.
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AIDS ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,HIGHLY active antiretroviral therapy ,CLUSTER randomized controlled trials ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,COUNSELING of AIDS patients - Abstract
Background: Globally, men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs remain disproportionately affected by HIV, but they have not been the focus of prevention and treatment interventions in many resource-limited settings. Methods/Design: This cluster-randomized trial (conducted from June 2012 to June 2017), evaluates whether single-venue, integrated delivery of core HIV services to vulnerable high-risk populations improves service utilization and consequently, HIV testing and other outcomes along the HIV care continuum. Core services include: HIV counseling and testing, information, education and communication, condom distribution, needle and syringe exchange programs, opioid agonist therapy, management of sexually transmitted infections, tuberculosis screening, diagnosis, and treatment, and antiretroviral therapy. Stratified restricted randomization was used to allocate 22 Indian cities (10 men who have sex with men and 12 people who inject drugs sites) at a 1:1 ratio to either the intervention or control condition. Integrated care centers were scaled-up and implemented in the 11 intervention cities and outcomes will be assessed by pre- and post-intervention surveys at intervention and control sites. As men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs are hidden populations, with no sampling frame, respondent-driven sampling will be used to accrue samples for the two independent cross-sectional surveys. Discussion: For an AIDS-free generation to be realized, prevention, care and treatment services need to reach all populations at risk for HIV infection. There is a clear gap in access to services among men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs. Trials need to be designed to optimize utilization of services in these populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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20. Getting to 90: linkage to HIV care among men who have sex with men and people who inject drugs in India.
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McFall, Allison M., Mehta, Shruti H., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Lucas, Gregory M., Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Celentano, David D., Kumar, Muniratnam S., Solomon, Suniti, and Solomon, Sunil S.
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *HIV infections , *THERAPEUTICS , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COUNSELING , *GAY men , *HEALTH , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL care costs , *MEDICAL cooperation , *POPULATION geography , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *INFORMATION resources , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DISCLOSURE , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *CROSS-sectional method , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *ECONOMICS ,HIV infections & psychology - Abstract
UNAIDS set an ambitious target of "90-90-90" by 2020. The first 90 being 90% of those HIV-infected will be diagnosed; the second 90 being 90% of those diagnosed will be linked to medical care and on antiretroviral therapy (ART). While there has been dramatic improvement in HIV testing and ART use, substantial losses continue to occur at linkage-to-care following HIV diagnosis. Data on linkage among men who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID) are sparse, despite a greater burden of HIV in these populations. This cross-sectional study was conducted in 27 sites across India. Participants were recruited using respondent-driven sampling and had to be ⩾18 years and self-identify as male and report sex with a man in the prior year (MSM) or injection drug use in the prior 2 years (PWID). Analyses were restricted to HIV-infected persons aware of their status. Linkage was defined as ever visiting a doctor for management of HIV after diagnosis. We explored factors that discriminated between those linked and not linked to care using multi-level logistic regression and area under the receiver operating curves (AUC), focusing on modifiable factors. Of 1726 HIV-infected persons aware of their status, 80% were linked to care. Modifiable factors around the time of diagnosis that best discriminated linkage included receiving assistance with HIV medical care (odds ratio [OR]: 10.0, 95% confidence interval [CI]): 5.6-18.2), disclosure of HIV-positive status (OR: 2.8; 95% CI: 2.4-6.1) and receiving information and counseling on management of HIV (OR: 2.3; 95% CI: 1.1-4.6). The AUC for these three factors together was 0.85, higher than other combinations of factors. We identified three simple modifiable factors around the time of diagnosis that could facilitate linkage to care among MSM and PWID in low- and middle-income countries to achieve UNAIDS targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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21. The prevalence and impact of childhood sexual abuse on HIV-risk behaviors among men who have sex with men (MSM) in India.
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Tomori, Cecilia, McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Mehta, Shruti H., Nimmagadda, Nymisha, Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Solomon, Suniti, Solomon, Sunil S., and Celentano, David D.
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SEX crimes , *HIV infection risk factors , *JUVENILE diseases , *MEN who have sex with men , *DISEASE prevalence , *PUBLIC health , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *CHILD sexual abuse & psychology , *HIV prevention , *HIV infection transmission , *CHILD sexual abuse , *GENDER identity , *HIV infections , *HOMOSEXUALITY , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *RISK-taking behavior , *HUMAN sexuality , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *QUALITATIVE research , *SEXUAL partners - Abstract
Background: Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is a significant global public health problem, which is associated with negative psychosocial outcomes and high-risk sexual behaviors in adults. Men who have sex with men (MSM) often report higher prevalence of CSA history than the general population, and CSA may play a key role in MSM's greater vulnerability to HIV.Methods: This study examined the prevalence of CSA history and its impact on the number of recent HIV-related risk behaviors (unprotected anal intercourse, high number of male and female sexual partners, alcohol use, drug use, and sex work in prior 6 months) and lifetime risk behaviors and experiences (high number of lifetime male and female sexual partners, early sexual debut, injection drug use, sex work, and intimate partner violence) among 11,788 adult MSM recruited via respondent driven sampling across 12 sites in India, with additional insights from thematic analysis of qualitative research with 363 MSM from 15 sites.Results: Nearly a quarter (22.4 %) of participants experienced CSA, with substantially higher prevalence of CSA in the South and among kothis (feminine sexual identity). Qualitative findings revealed that older, trusted men may target young and, especially, gender nonconforming boys, and perpetrators' social position facilitates nondisclosure. CSA may also initiate further same-sex encounters, including sex work. In multivariable analysis, MSM who experienced CSA had 21 % higher rate of recent (adjusted rate ratio [aRR = 1.21], 95 % confidence interval [CI]: 1.14-1.28), and 2.0 times higher lifetime (aRR = 2.04, 95 % CI: 1.75-2.38) HIV-related behaviors/experiences compared with those who did not.Conclusion: This large, mixed-methods study found high overall prevalence of CSA among MSM (22.4 %), with substantially higher prevalence among MSM residing in the South and among more feminine sexual identities. Qualitative findings highlighted boys' vulnerabilities to CSA, especially gender nonconformity, and CSA's role in further sexual encounters, including sex work. Additionally, CSA was associated with an elevated rate of recent, and an even higher rate of lifetime HIV-related risk factors. Our results suggest an acute need for the development of CSA prevention interventions and the integration of mental health services for MSM with histories of CSA as part of HIV-prevention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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22. HIV Care Continuum Among Men Who Have Sex With Men and Persons Who Inject Drugs in India: Barriers to Successful Engagement.
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Mehta, Shruti H., Lucas, Gregory M., Solomon, Suniti, Srikrishnan, Aylur K., McFall, Allison M., Dhingra, Neeraj, Nandagopal, Paneerselvam, Kumar, M. Suresh, Celentano, David D., and Solomon, Sunil S.
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MEN who have sex with men ,HIV prevention ,MEDICAL care ,VIRAL load ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISEASES - Abstract
Background: We characterize the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care continuum for men who have sex with men (MSM) and persons who inject drugs (PWID) across India. Methods: We recruited 12 022 MSM and 14 481 PWID across 26 Indian cities, using respondent-driven sampling (September 2012 to December 2013). Participants were aged =18 years and either self-identified as male and reported sex with a man in the prior year (MSM) or reported injection drug use in the prior 2 years (PWID). Correlates of awareness of HIV-positive status were characterized using multilevel logistic regression. Results: A total of 1146 MSM were HIV infected, of whom a median of 30% were aware of their HIV-positive status, 23% were linked to care, 22% were retained before antiretroviral therapy (ART), 16% had started ART, 16% were currently receiving ART, and 10% had suppressed viral loads. There was site variability (awareness range, 0%- 90%; suppressed viral load range, 0%-58%). A total of 2906 PWID were HIV infected, of whom a median of 41% were aware, 36% were linked to care, 31% were retained before ART, 20% had started ART, 18% were currently receiving ART, and 15% had suppressed viral loads. Similar site variability was observed (awareness range: 2%-93%; suppressed viral load range: 0%-47%). Factors significantly associated with awareness were region, older age, being married (MSM) or female (PWID), use of other services (PWID), more lifetime sexual partners (MSM), and needle sharing (PWID). Ongoing injection drug use (PWID) and alcohol use (MSM) were associated with lower awareness. Conclusions: In this large sample, the major barrier to HIV care engagement was awareness of HIV-positive status. Efforts should focus on linking HIV testing to other essential services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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23. Hepatitis C care continuum and associated barriers among people who inject drugs in Chennai, India.
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Patel, Eshan U., Solomon, Sunil S., Mcfall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Pradeep, Amrose, Nandagopal, Paneerselvam, Laeyendecker, Oliver, Tobian, Aaron A.R., Thomas, David L., Sulkowski, Mark S., Kumar, M. Suresh, and Mehta, Shruti H.
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HEPATITIS C treatment , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *ANTIVIRAL agents , *PUBLIC health , *HEALTH surveys , *DISEASES - Abstract
Background: Little is known regarding barriers to hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment among people who inject drugs (PWID) in low-resource settings, particularly in the era of direct-acting antiviral therapies.Methods: Between March, 2015-August, 2016, a cross-sectional survey was administered to community-based PWID in Chennai, India to examine the HCV care continuum and associated barriers. Adjusted prevalence ratios (APR) were estimated by multivariable Poisson regression with robust variance.Results: All participants were male (n = 541); 152 participants had HCV mono-infection and 61 participants had HIV/HCV co-infection. Only one HCV mono-infected and one HIV/HCV co-infected participant was linked to HCV care. Overall, there was moderate knowledge of HCV disease but poor knowledge of HCV treatment. Higher total knowledge scores were negatively associated with HIV/HCV co-infection (vs. HCV mono-infection), though this was not statistically significant in adjusted analysis (APR = 0.71 [95%CI = 0.47-1.06]). Participants ≥45 years (APR = 0.73 [95%CI = 0.58-0.92]) and participants with HIV/HCV co-infection (APR = 0.64 [95%CI = 0.47-0.87]) were less willing to take weekly interferon injections for 12 weeks. Willingness to undergo HCV treatment improved with decreasing duration of therapy, higher perceived efficacy, and use of pills vs. interferon, though willingness to use interferon improved with decreasing duration of therapy. Most participants preferred daily visits to a clinic for HCV treatment versus receiving a month's supply. Participants ≥45 years (vs. <45 years; APR = 0.70 [95%CI = 0.56-0.88]) and participants with HIV/HCV co-infection (APR = 0.75 [95%CI = 0.57-0.98]) were less likely to intend on seeking HCV care. Common reasons for not having already seen a provider for HCV treatment differed by HIV status, and included low perceived need for treatment (HCV-mono-infected), competing money/health priorities and costs/fears about treatment (HIV/HCV-co-infected).Conclusion: Residual gaps in HCV knowledge and continuing negative perceptions related to interferon-based therapy highlight the need to scale-up educational initiatives. Readiness for HCV treatment was particularly low among HIV/HCV co-infected and older PWID, emphasizing the importance of tailored treatment strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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24. Integrating HCV testing with HIV programs improves hepatitis C outcomes in people who inject drugs: A cluster-randomized trial.
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Solomon, Sunil Suhas, Quinn, Thomas C., Solomon, Suniti, McFall, Allison M., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Verma, Vinita, Kumar, Muniratnam S., Laeyendecker, Oliver, Celentano, David D., Iqbal, Syed H., Anand, Santhanam, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Saravanan, Shanmugam, Thomas, David L., Sachdeva, Kuldeep Singh, Lucas, Gregory M., and Mehta, Shruti H.
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NEEDLE exchange programs , *HEPATITIS C , *CLINICAL drug trials , *HEPATITIS C virus , *HARM reduction - Abstract
• Integration of HCV testing with HIV/harm reduction services increased uptake of HCV among PWID. • PWID in intervention vs. usual care sites were more likely to have been tested for HCV. • PWID in intervention vs. usual care sites were more likely to be aware of their HCV status. • Despite relative increases, absolute numbers aware of HCV status remained low. • Integration of services is an important early step towards HCV elimination. There have been calls to integrate HCV testing into existing services, including harm reduction and HIV prevention and treatment, but there are few empirical trials to date. We evaluated the impact of integrating HCV testing/education into integrated care centers (ICCs) delivering HIV services to people who inject drugs (PWID) across India, using a cluster-randomized trial. We compared ICCs with usual care in the PWID stratum (12 sites) of a 22-site cluster-randomized trial. In 6 sites, ICCs delivering HIV testing, harm reduction, other preventive services and linkage to HIV treatment were scaled from opioid agonist therapy centers and operated for 2 years. On-site rapid HCV antibody testing was integrated after 1 year. To assess impact, we conducted baseline and evaluation surveys using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) across the 12 sites (n = 11,993 recruited at baseline; n = 11,721 recruited at evaluation). The primary outcome was population-level self-reported HCV testing history. At evaluation, HCV antibody prevalence ranged from 7.2–76.6%. Across 6 ICCs, 5,263 ICC clients underwent HCV testing, of whom 2,278 were newly diagnosed. At evaluation, PWID in ICC clusters were 4-fold more likely to report being tested for HCV than in usual care clusters, adjusting for baseline testing (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 3.69; 95% CI 1.34–10.2). PWID in ICC clusters were also 7-fold more likely to be aware of their HCV status (aPR 7.11; 95% CI 1.14–44.3) and significantly more likely to initiate treatment (aPR 9.86; 95% CI 1.52–63.8). We provide among the first empirical data supporting the integration of HCV testing into HIV/harm reduction services. To achieve elimination targets, programs will need to scale-up such venues to deliver comprehensive HCV services. NCT01686750. Delivering hepatitis C virus (HCV) testing to people who inject drugs (PWID) in places where they also have access to HIV prevention and treatment services is an effective way to improve uptake of HCV testing among communities of PWID. To achieve the World Health Organization's ambitious elimination targets, integrated programs will need to be scaled up to deliver comprehensive HCV services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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25. Overlap between harm reduction and HIV service utilisation among PWID in India: Implications for HIV combination prevention.
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Smith, M. Kumi, Solomon, Sunil S., Cummings, Derek A.T., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., Kumar, M. Suresh, Vasudevan, C.K., McFall, Allison M., Lucas, Gregory M., Celentano, David D., and Mehta, Shruti H.
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HIV prevention , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *HARM reduction , *DISEASE incidence , *PUBLIC health , *DISEASES - Abstract
Background: In some regions, HIV incidence is rising among people who inject drugs (PWID). Combination prevention approaches are well suited to PWID who face multiple sources of HIV risk. This analysis investigates patterns of utilisation to basic HIV services (HIV counselling and testing [HCT], antiretroviral therapy [ART]) as well as harm reduction programs (needle and syringe exchange programs [NSEP] and opioid agonist therapy [OAT]) among PWID and how utilisation of harm reduction services is associated with HIV-related care seeking behaviours.Methods: Respondent-driven sampling was used to recruit 14,481 PWID across 15 cities in India. Sampling-weighted multilevel logistic regression models assessed associations between utilisation of harm reduction service and HCT and ART use among those indicated (90.3% and 5.0% of full sample, respectively). We considered both recent (prior year) and ever use of services.Results: Overall, 42.3% reported prior HIV testing and 57.9% of eligible persons reported ART initiation, but overlap with NSEP and OAT use was limited. In adjusted models, recent and ever use of both NSEP and OAT were significantly associated with recent and ever HCT utilisation, respectively; however, harm reduction utilisation was not associated with ART initiation among eligible participants.Conclusions: Harm reduction services may play a key role in linking PWID with HIV testing; however, they were not associated with ART initiation among eligible individuals. Moreover, a large majority who utilised NSEP and OAT were not engaged in optimal HIV care or prevention, highlighting missed opportunities and a need for stronger linkages between NSEP/OAT and HIV care and treatment, particularly among those actively injecting. These findings provide key insights to better understand how services can be linked or combined to optimise service utilisation among PWID. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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26. Injection Drug Network Characteristics Are Important Markers of HIV Risk Behavior and Lack of Viral Suppression.
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Cepeda, Javier A., Solomon, Sunil S., Srikrishnan, Aylur K., McFall, Allison M., Kumar, Muniratnam Suresh, Vasudevan, Canjeevaram K., Anand, Santhanam, Celentano, David D., Lucas, Gregory M., and Mehta, Shruti H.
- Abstract
Background: People who inject drugs (PWID) who are highly connected within their injection drug networks may be important HIV transmission nodes if they frequently share syringes with other PWID and are not engaged in HIV care. In India, HIV transmission fueled by injection drug use is increasing; however, little is known about the associations between injection network size and syringe sharing and viral suppression. Methods: We recruited 14,481 PWID between October 2012 and December 2013 by respondent-driven sampling across 15 sites in India. Interviewer-administered questionnaires assessed network characteristics, substance use, HIV testing experience, and access to health services. We used multilevel logistic regression modeling to evaluate the relationship between injection drug network size and (1) syringe sharing at last injection and (2) viral suppression among HIV-positive participants (,150 copies/mL). Findings: The median injection network size was 3 (interquartile range: 1–5), and 7% of participants injected with .10 members in the past 30 days. PWID who had .10 members in their network were 1.65 times (95% confidence interval: 1.12 to 2.42, P = 0.0111) more likely to have shared a syringe at last injection compared with those in the 0–1 members in their drug networks. In addition, individuals with the largest injection drug networks were 31% (95% confidence interval: 0.53 to 0.90, P = 0.006) less likely to be virally suppressed compared with those in the smallest injection drug networks. Discussion: Individuals with larger networks may be important in HIV transmission within injection drug networks because they were the most likely to engage in recent syringe sharing and least likely to be virally suppressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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