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Homelessness, unstable housing, and risk of HIV and hepatitis C virus acquisition among people who inject drugs: a systematic review and meta-analysis

机译:注射药物的人们的无家可归,不稳定的住房和艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎病毒的风险:系统审查和荟萃分析

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BackgroundPeople who inject drugs (PWID) are at increased risk for HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and also have high levels of homelessness and unstable housing. We assessed whether homelessness or unstable housing is associated with an increased risk of HIV or HCV acquisition among PWID compared with PWID who are not homeless or are stably housed.MethodsIn this systematic review and meta-analysis, we updated an existing database of HIV and HCV incidence studies published between Jan 1, 2000, and June 13, 2017. Using the same strategy as for this existing database, we searched MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO for studies, including conference abstracts, published between June 13, 2017, and Sept 14, 2020, that estimated HIV or HCV incidence, or both, among community-recruited PWID. We only included studies reporting original results without restrictions to study design or language. We contacted authors of studies that reported HIV or HCV incidence, or both, but did not report on an association with homelessness or unstable housing, to request crude data and, where possible, adjusted effect estimates. We extracted effect estimates and pooled data using random-effects meta-analyses to quantify the associations between recent (current or within the past year) homelessness or unstable housing compared with not recent homelessness or unstable housing, and risk of HIV or HCV acquisition. We assessed risk of bias using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale and between-study heterogeneity using the I2statistic and p value for heterogeneity.FindingsWe identified 14?351 references in our database search, of which 392 were subjected to full-text review alongside 277 studies from our existing database. Of these studies, 55 studies met inclusion criteria. We contacted the authors of 227 studies that reported HIV or HCV incidence in PWID but did not report association with the exposure of interest and obtained 48 unpublished estimates from 21 studies. After removal of duplicate data, we included 37 studies with 70 estimates (26 for HIV; 44 for HCV). Studies originated from 16 countries including in North America, Europe, Australia, east Africa, and Asia. Pooling unadjusted estimates, recent homelessness or unstable housing was associated with an increased risk of acquiring HIV (crude relative risk [cRR] 1·55 [95% CI 1·23–1·95; p=0·0002]; I2=?62·7%; n=17) and HCV (1·65 [1·44–1·90; p<0·0001]; I2=?44·8%; n=28]) among PWID compared with those who were not homeless or were stably housed. Associations for both HIV and HCV persisted when pooling adjusted estimates (adjusted relative risk for HIV: 1·39 [95% CI 1·06–1·84; p=0·019]; I2=?65·5%; n=9; and for HCV: 1·64 [1·43–1·89; p<0·0001]; I2=?9·6%; n=14). For risk of HIV acquisition, the association for unstable housing (cRR 1·82 [1·13–2·95; p=0·014]; n=5) was higher than for homelessness (1·44 [1·13–1·83; p=0·0036]; n=12), whereas no difference was seen between these outcomes for risk of HCV acquisition (1·72 [1·48–1·99; p<0·0001] for unstable housing, 1·66 [1·37–2·00; p<0·0001] for homelessness).InterpretationHomelessness and unstable housing are associated with increased risk of HIV and HCV acquisition among PWID. Our findings support the development of interventions that simultaneously address homelessness and unstable housing and HIV and HCV transmission in this population.FundingNational Institute for Health Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Commonwealth Scholarship Commission.
机译:注入药物(PWID)的背景是艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染的风险增加,也具有高水平的无家可归和不稳定的住房。我们评估了无家可归或不稳定的外壳是否与PWID之间的艾滋病毒或HCV收购的风险增加有关,与不无家可归的PWID或稳定的储存。此系统审查和META分析,我们更新了艾滋病毒和HCV的现有数据库2017年1月1日至2017年6月13日之间发布的发病率研究。使用与此现有数据库的相同策略,我们搜索了Medline,Embase和Psycinfo进行研究,包括会议摘要,2017年6月13日之间发表,9月14日发布2020年,估计的艾滋病毒或HCV发病率,或两者在社区招募的PWID中。我们仅包括在没有限制的情况下报告原始结果的研究,以研究设计或语言。我们联系了报告艾滋病毒或HCV发病率的研究作者,但没有报告与无家可归或不稳定的住房联合,要求提出粗略数据,在可能的情况下,调整后的效果估计。我们使用随机效应元分析提取效应估计和汇总数据,以量化最近(过去一年或过去一年内)无家可归或不稳定住房之间的关联,而不是最近的无家可归或不稳定的住房,以及艾滋病毒或HCV收购的风险。我们评估了使用纽卡斯尔 - 渥太华规模的偏见的风险,使用I2Static和P值之间的研究业务与异质性.Findingswe识别的14?351在我们的数据库搜索中的参考文献,其中392次与来自277项研究一起进行全文审查我们现有的数据库。在这些研究中,55项研究符合纳入标准。我们联系了227项研究的作者,报告了在PWID中报告的艾滋病毒或HCV发病率,但没有报告与利息的曝光并获得48项未发表估计的协会。在去除重复数据后,我们包括37项,其中37项估计(26例HIV; HCV)。研究起源于16个国家,包括北美,欧洲,澳大利亚,东非和亚洲。汇集未经调整的估计,最近的无家可归或不稳定的外壳与获取艾滋病毒的风险增加(粗额风险[CRR] 1·55 [95%CI 1·23-1·95; P = 0·0002]; I2 =? 62·7%; n = 17)和HCV(1·65 [1·44-1·90; P <0·0001];与那些人相比,PWID之间的I2 =?44·8%; n = 28])没有无家可归或稳定地坐着。当汇集调整后的估计时艾滋病毒和HCV的关联持续存在(调整HIV的相对风险:1·39 [95%CI 1·06-1·84; P = 0·019]; I2 =?65·5%; n = 9;和HCV:1·64 [1·43-1·89; P <0·0001]; I2 =?9·6%; n = 14)。对于HIV采集的风险,不稳定外壳的关联(CRR 1·82 [1·13-2·95; p = 0·014]; n = 5)高于无家可归(1·44 [1·13- 1·83; p = 0·0036]; n = 12),而且在这些结果之间没有差异,用于HCV采集风险(1·72 [1·48-1·99; P <0·0001]的风险不稳定无家可归的外壳,1·66 [1·37-2·00; P <0·0001]。interpretationhomelessness和不稳定的外壳与PWID之间的HIV和HCV采集的风险增加有关。我们的调查结果支持开展干预措施,同时解决这一人民中无家可归和不稳定的住房和艾滋病毒和艾滋病毒和HCV传播。国家卫生研究所,国家药物滥用研究所,国家过敏和传染病研究所和英联邦奖学金委员会。
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