Hepatitis C transmission in young people who inject drugs: Insights using a dynamic model informed by state public health surveillance

被引:21
作者
Gicquelais, Rachel E. [1 ,2 ]
Foxman, Betsy [1 ]
Coyle, Joseph [3 ]
Eisenberg, Marisa C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 1415 Washington Hts, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[3] Michigan Dept Hlth & Human Serv, 320 S Walnut St, Lansing, MI 48933 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Hepatitis C virus; Injection drug use; Systems modeling; INTERFERON-FREE THERAPIES; STREET-INVOLVED YOUTH; VIRUS-INFECTION; UNITED-STATES; ANTIVIRAL TREATMENT; HCV TRANSMISSION; SAN-FRANCISCO; COST-EFFECTIVENESS; PREVALENCE; USERS;
D O I
10.1016/j.epidem.2019.02.003
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100401 ;
摘要
Increasing injection of heroin and prescription opioids have led to increases in the incidence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in US young adults since the early 2000s. How best to interrupt transmission and decrease HCV prevalence in young people who inject drugs (PWID) is uncertain. We developed an age-stratified ordinary differential equation HCV transmission model of PWID aged 15-64, which we fit to Michigan HCV surveillance data among young PWID aged 15-29. We used Latin hypercube sampling to fit to data under 10,000 plausible model parameterizations. We used the best-fitting 10% of simulations to predict the potential impact of primary (reducing injection initiation), secondary (increasing cessation, reducing injection partners, or reducing injection drug use relapse), and tertiary (HCV treatment) interventions (over the period 2017-2030) on acute and chronic HCV cases by the year 2030. Treating 3 per 100 current and former PWID per year could reduce chronic HCV by 27.3% (range: 18.7-30.3%) and acute HCV by 23.6% (range: 6.7-29.5%) by 2030 among PWID aged 15-29 if 90% are cured (i.e. achieved sustained virologic response [SVR] to treatment). Reducing the number of syringe sharing partners per year by 10% was predicted to reduce chronic HCV by 15.7% (range: 9.4-23.8%) and acute cases by 21.4% (range: 14.2-32.3%) among PWID aged 15-29 by 2030. In simulations of combinations of interventions, reducing injection initiation, syringe sharing, and relapse rates each by 10% while increasing cessation rates by 10% predicted a 27.7% (range: 18.0-39.7%) reduction in chronic HCV and a 38.4% (range: 28.3-53.3%) reduction in acute HCV. Our results highlight the need for HCV treatment among both current and former PWID and the scale up of both primary and secondary interventions to concurrently reduce HCV prevalence and incidence in Michigan.
引用
收藏
页码:86 / 95
页数:10
相关论文
共 114 条
[71]   Cost-effectiveness of hepatitis C virus antiviral treatment for injection drug user populations [J].
Martin, Natasha K. ;
Vickerman, Peter ;
Miners, Alec ;
Foster, Graham R. ;
Hutchinson, Sharon J. ;
Goldberg, David J. ;
Hickman, Matthew .
HEPATOLOGY, 2012, 55 (01) :49-57
[72]   Optimal Control of Hepatitis C Antiviral Treatment Programme Delivery for Prevention amongst a Population of Injecting Drug Users [J].
Martin, Natasha K. ;
Pitcher, Ashley B. ;
Vickerman, Peter ;
Vassall, Anna ;
Hickman, Matthew .
PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (08)
[73]   Can antiviral therapy for hepatitis C reduce the prevalence of HCV among injecting drug user populations? A modeling analysis of its prevention utility [J].
Martin, Natasha K. ;
Vickerman, Peter ;
Foster, Graham R. ;
Hutchinson, Sharon J. ;
Goldberg, David J. ;
Hickman, Matthew .
JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, 2011, 54 (06) :1137-1144
[74]   Mathematical modelling of hepatitis C treatment for injecting drug users [J].
Martin, Natasha K. ;
Vickerman, Peter ;
Hickman, Matthew .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2011, 274 (01) :58-66
[75]   THE STAYING SAFE INTERVENTION: TRAINING PEOPLE WHO INJECT DRUGS IN STRATEGIES TO AVOID INJECTION-RELATED HCV AND HIV INFECTION [J].
Mateu-Gelabert, Pedro ;
Gwadz, Marya Viorst ;
Guarino, Honoria ;
Sandoval, Milagros ;
Cleland, Charles M. ;
Jordan, Ashly ;
Hagan, Holly ;
Lune, Howard ;
Friedman, Samuel R. .
AIDS EDUCATION AND PREVENTION, 2014, 26 (02) :144-157
[76]   Examining non-AIDS mortality among people who inject drugs [J].
Mathers, Bradley M. ;
Degenhardt, Louisa .
AIDS, 2014, 28 :S435-S444
[77]   Protection against persistence of hepatitis C [J].
Mehta, SH ;
Cox, A ;
Hoover, DR ;
Wang, XH ;
Mao, Q ;
Ray, S ;
Strathdee, SA ;
Vlahov, D ;
Thomas, DL .
LANCET, 2002, 359 (9316) :1478-1483
[78]   Limited uptake of hepatitis C treatment among injection drug users [J].
Mehta, Shruti H. ;
Genberg, Becky L. ;
Astemborski, Jacquie ;
Kavasery, Ravi ;
Kirk, Gregory D. ;
Vlahov, David ;
Strathdee, Steffanie A. ;
Thomas, David L. .
JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2008, 33 (03) :126-133
[79]   Impact of Hepatitis C Treatment as Prevention for People Who Inject Drugs is sensitive to contact network structure [J].
Metzig, Cornelia ;
Surey, Julian ;
Francis, Marie ;
Conneely, Jim ;
Abubakar, Ibrahim ;
White, Peter J. .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
[80]  
Michigan Department of Community Health Viral Hepatitis Surveillance and Prevention Unit, 2013, YOUNG AD HEP C SUMM