Impact of harm minimization interventions on reducing blood-borne infection transmission and some injecting behaviors among people who inject drugs: an overview and evidence gap mapping

被引:4
|
作者
Tonin, Fernanda S. [1 ]
Alves da Costa, Filipa [2 ]
Fernandez-Llimos, Fernando [3 ]
机构
[1] Inst Politecn Lisboa, H&TRC Hlth & Technol Res Ctr, ESTeSL Escola Super Tecnol Saude, Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Univ Lisbon, Res Inst Med iMed ULisboa, Fac Pharm, Ave Prof Gama Pinto, Lisbon, Portugal
[3] Univ Porto, Fac Pharm, Appl Mol Biosci Unit, UCIBIO i4HB,Lab Pharmacol, Porto, Portugal
关键词
Harm reduction; Injectable drug use; Blood-borne infections; Systematic reviews; Evidence gaps; SYRINGE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS; HIV RISK-REDUCTION; HEPATITIS-C VIRUS; SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS; METAANALYSIS; PREVENTION; NALOXONE; NEEDLE; COVERAGE; POLICY;
D O I
10.1186/s13722-024-00439-9
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
BackgroundThis study aimed to synthetize the evidence on the effectiveness of harm minimization interventions on reducing blood-borne infection transmission and injecting behaviors among people who inject drugs (PWID) through a comprehensive overview of systematic reviews and evidence gap mapping.MethodsA systematic review was conducted with searches in PubMed and Scopus to identify systematic reviews assessing the impact of interventions aimed at reducing the harms associated with injectable drug use. The overall characteristics of the studies were extracted and their methodological quality was assessed using AMSTAR-2. An evidence gap map was constructed, highlighting the most frequently reported outcomes by intervention (CRD42023387713).ResultsThirty-three systematic reviews were included. Of these, 14 (42.2%) assessed the impact of needle/syringe exchange programs (NSEP) and 11 (33.3%) examined opioid agonist therapy (OAT). These interventions are likely to be associated with reductions of HIV/HCV incidence (10-40% risk reduction for NSEP; 50-60% for OAT) and sharing injecting paraphernalia (50% for NSEP, 25-85% for OAT), particularly when combined (moderate evidence). Behavioral/educational interventions were assessed in 12 reviews (36.4%) with most authors in favor/partially in favor of the use of these approaches (moderate evidence). Take-home naloxone programs and supervised-injection facilities were each assessed in two studies (6.1%), which reported inconclusive results (limited/inconsistent evidence). Most authors reported high levels of heterogeneity and risk of bias. Other interventions and outcomes were inadequately reported. Most systematic reviews presented low or critically low quality.ConclusionThe evidence is sufficient to support the effectiveness of OAT, NSEP and their combination in reducing blood-borne infection transmission and certain injecting behaviors among PWID. However, evidence of other harm minimizations interventions in different settings and for some outcomes remain insufficient.
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页数:22
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