Impact of pandemic-induced service disruptions and behavioral changes on HCV and HIV transmission amongst people who inject drugs: a modeling study

Jasmine Wang, Becky L Genberg, Kenneth Feder, Gregory D Kirk, Shruti H Mehta, Kyra Grantz, Amy Wesolowski
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Abstract

Background The COVID-19 pandemic may have disproportionally impacted vulnerable groups such as people who inject drugs (PWID) through reduced healthcare services as well as social changes from pandemic mitigation measures. Understanding how the COVID-19 pandemic and associated mitigation strategies subsequently changed the trajectory of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and HIV transmission is critical to estimating disease burdens, identifying outbreak risk, and developing informed intervention strategies. Methods Using behavioral data from the AIDS Linked to the IntraVenous Experience (ALIVE) study, an ongoing community-based cohort of PWID in Baltimore, USA, and an individual-based network model, we explored the impacts of service disruptions combined with changes in social networks and injecting behaviors of PWID on HCV and HIV transmission. Results Analyses of ALIVE data showed that during the pandemic, there was an acceleration in injection cessation trajectories overall, but those who continued injecting increased the frequency of injection; at the same time, individual drug-use networks became smaller and the probability of injecting with others decreased. Simulation results demonstrated that HCV and HIV prevalence increased from service disruptions alone, but these effects were mitigated when including observed behavior changes in addition. Conclusions Model results combined with rich individual behavioral data indicated that pandemic-induced behavioral changes of PWID that lasted longer than service disruptions could have offset the increasing disease burden caused by disrupted service access during the pandemic.
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大流行引起的服务中断和行为改变对注射吸毒者中丙型肝炎病毒和艾滋病毒传播的影响:一项模拟研究
背景2019冠状病毒病大流行可能通过减少卫生保健服务以及大流行缓解措施带来的社会变化,对注射吸毒者(PWID)等弱势群体产生了不成比例的影响。了解COVID-19大流行和相关缓解策略随后如何改变丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)和艾滋病毒的传播轨迹,对于估计疾病负担、确定疫情风险和制定知情干预策略至关重要。方法利用美国巴尔的摩正在进行的PWID社区队列研究——艾滋病与静脉注射相关(ALIVE)研究的行为数据,以及基于个体的网络模型,探讨服务中断、社会网络和PWID注射行为的变化对HCV和HIV传播的影响。结果:ALIVE数据分析显示,在大流行期间,停止注射的轨迹总体上加快了,但继续注射的人增加了注射频率;与此同时,个人吸毒网络变小了,与他人一起注射的可能性降低了。模拟结果表明,仅服务中断就会增加HCV和HIV的流行率,但当还包括观察到的行为变化时,这些影响会减轻。模型结果与丰富的个人行为数据相结合表明,大流行导致的PWID行为变化持续时间长于服务中断,可以抵消大流行期间服务中断所造成的日益增加的疾病负担。
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