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Title: HIV RISK REDUCTION AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT


1
HIV RISK REDUCTION AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT
  • George E. Woody, M.D.
  • Department of Psychiatry, University of
    Pennsylvania and Department of Veterans Affairs,
    Philadelphia, PA

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Overview of HIV Rise in NYC Among IDUs (Kreek et
al)
  • 1978-1984 Increase from 0 to about 55 overall
  • Leveling off at 50-55, then a slow decrease
    beginning around 1992

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HIV-1 Infection in Intravenous Drug Users In New
York City 1983 - 1984 Study Protective Effect
of Methadone Maintenance (Kreek et al)
  • 50 60 of untreated, street heroin addicts test
    positive for HIV-1
  • 9 of methadone continuously maintained since
    lt1978 test positive

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Six Year HIV Infection Rates by Treatment Status
at Time of Enrollment In Study
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Methadone Levels Study
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Reasons for HIV Risk Reduction in Methadone
Maintenance
  • Abstinence
  • If dont stop drug use completely almost always
    reduce it substantially (e.g. reduction in
    severity of the target symptom)
  • Fewer injections
  • Exposure to risk reduction counseling and other
    information in treatment program

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NIDA Cocaine Collaborative Treatment
StudyCrits-Christoph et al
  • Random assignment to
  • group drug counseling alone (GDC)
  • individual drug counseling (IDC) plus GDC
  • cognitive therapy (CT) plus GDC
  • supportive-expressive therapy (SE) plus GDC.

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  • 6-month active phase and a 3-month booster phase.
  • GDC sessions were 1.5 hours weekly throughout the
    6-month active phase.
  • Oriented toward helping patients stop cocaine use
    and
  • Facilitating participation in 12-step programs
  • Included education about HIV risk reduction.

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  •  
  • Individual therapy sessions for IDC, CT and SE
    therapy were
  • 50 minutes twice weekly for the first 12 weeks
  • Then weekly during weeks 13-24.
  • Monthly individual sessions held during the
    booster phase in months 7-9.

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  • Patients recruited by advertisements, from
    substance abuse treatment programs, referrals
    from friends or acquaintances, mental health
    centers, and private mental health providers.
  •  
  • Patients 18-60 years of age, principal DSM-IV
    diagnosis of cocaine dependence that was current
    or in early partial remission, and had used
    cocaine gt1 day in the past 30 days.

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Exclusion criteria
  • Unstable living situations
  • Inability to give informed consent
  • Opioid or polysubstance dependence (current or in
    early remission)
  • Major psychiatric disorder other than cocaine
    dependence
  • Needing to be maintained on psychotropic
    medication
  • Life-threatening or unstable medical condition
  • Serious legal problems such as impending
    incarceration, living in a halfway house, being
    in a hospital for more than 10 of the past 30
    days
  • Scheduling problem that made it difficult to keep
    regular appointments.

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Exclusion criteria (contd)
  • Patients invited for an intake visit after being
    screened by telephone
  • At intake visit study explained and informed
    consent obtained.
  • Patients then began a screening/stabilization
    phase designed to select those with enough
    motivation to participate in an outpatient study.
  • Patients required to attend three visits within
    14 days, including one group session and two case
    management sessions as a test of their ability to
    comply with study requirements.

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  • - 2197 patients screened
  • - 1771 met basic inclusion criteria and
    scheduled for an intake visit,
  • - 937 reported for intake
  • - 870 began orientation
  • - 487 completed required number of appointments
    randomized.

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Five sites participated
  • Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Brookside Hospital (Nashua, NH)
  • Massachusetts General Hospital
  • McLean Hospital (Belmont, MA).

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Randomized patients had
  • Average age of 34
  • Lived alone (70),
  • 13 years of education
  • Were employed (60)
  • Male (77) Caucasian (58)
  • 40 African-American 2 were Latino/a.

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  • Crack smoking the most common (79)
  • 19 intranasal cocaine
  • 2 used intravenously.
  • Average patient used cocaine for 7 years and
    reported 10 days of cocaine use and 7 days of
    alcohol use in the last month.

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  • Following randomization, patients kept about half
    their scheduled appointments during the six-month
    active treatment phase.
  • HIV risk measured by RAB
  • A self-report instrument that takes 10-15 minutes
    to complete
  • Measures behaviors that are associated with HIV
    risk.
  • Focuses on drug use during the past 30 days, and
  • Injection and sexual risk during the past 6
    months

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  • For example, in response to the question In the
    past six months, how often have you given drugs
    to someone so you could have sex with them?
  • Respondent asked to check one of seven items
    ranging from never to more than once a day.

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  • Sixteen questions used to calculate three
    composite HIV risk scores
  • Drug score
  • Sex score
  • Total score.
  • Scores for a single question can range from 0 to
    7,
  • with higher values reflecting more instances of
    risk behavior.

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  • Of the 487 patients who were randomized, 483
    completed the RAB at study intake and 331
    completed it at both intake and six months. The
    data presented here report RAB data from the 331
    participants who completed it at both assessment
    points.

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Overall Results
  • Drug Use Treatment associated with significant
    decreases in cocaine use across all groups with
    the average patient reducing use from 10
    days/month to one day/month at the six-month
    assessment.

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  • Average ASI drug use composite score decreased
    from 0.24 at intake where 100 reported cocaine
    use in the last month, to an average of 0.12 at 6
    months, where 50 reported any cocaine use in the
    last month.
  •  
  • A significant treatment main effect, with
    patients who received IDC GDC showing less
    cocaine use at 6 months than patients in the
    other three treatment conditions (13).

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HIV Risk Reduction
  • Consistent with the crack smoking pattern of most
    patients, almost all HIV risk was in the sexual
    area and treatment participation was associated
    with a substantial reduction in sex risk and in
    total risk (primarily due to the reduction in sex
    risk), as seen in tables 1a and 1b.

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TABLE 1a Change in RAB Sex Risk and Treatment
Condition
Analyses of difference in means controlled by
baseline assessment means followed by the same
letter are not statistically different (pgt0.05)
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TABLE 1b Change in RAB Total Risk and Treatment
Condition
Analyses of difference in means controlled by
baseline assessment means followed by the same
letter are not statistically different (pgt0.05)
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Figure 1
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Figure 3

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Summary
  • Treatment is associated with HIV risk reduction
  • Shown to reduce HIV infection in case of
    methadone maintenance
  • Mechanisms differ according to drug of choice but
    similar in that all associated with less drug use
  • For injecting use - fewer injections
  • For non-injecting use - less unprotected sex
    less exchanging sex for drugs
  • Alcohol dependence associated with increased
    sexual risk, probably due to impaired judgment
    rx probably reduces but few studies
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