201. HIV drug resistance and HIV transmission risk behaviors among active injection drug users
- Author
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William E. Fisher, Michael J. Kozal, Deborah H. Cornman, Gerald Friedland, K. Rivet Amico, Jeffrey D. Fisher, and Jennifer Chiarella
- Subjects
Drug ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Anti-HIV Agents ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Drug Resistance ,HIV Infections ,Drug resistance ,law.invention ,Risk-Taking ,law ,Internal medicine ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Needle Sharing ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,media_common ,Retrospective Studies ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,HIV ,Retrospective cohort study ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Infectious Diseases ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Lentivirus ,Immunology ,Female ,business ,HIV drug resistance - Abstract
HIV(+) injection drug users in clinical care may harbor and transmit drug-resistant HIV. We performed a retrospective study of HIV drug resistance and risk behavior among HIV(+) injection drug users in care to determine the number of needle-sharing events that involved and the proportion of sharing partners exposed to drug-resistant HIV. Among 180 HIV injection drug users, 55 (31%) reported injecting drugs in the previous month, and 22 of these (40%) shared needles and/or works 148 times with 296 partners, of whom 271 (92%) were thought to be HIV(-) or status unknown. Further, 55 (31%) drug users harbored resistant HIV, including 5 (3% of total) who also shared needles and/or works a total of 27 times with 44 partners (18% of all sharing events and 15% of all exposed partners). A small proportion of injection drug users receiving clinical care engage in injection risk behavior and carry resistant HIV; however, because of multiple partners and needle-sharing events, they expose a substantial number of individuals to drug-resistant HIV. Strategies to reduce injection drug use risk behaviors among patients in clinical care are needed to reduce the transmission of sensitive and resistant HIV.
- Published
- 2005