在缅甸,较高的美沙酮剂量减少了美沙酮客户的危险注射行为

Sun Tun , B. Vicknasingam , Darshan Singh
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:缅甸注射吸毒者(PWIDs)的艾滋病毒感染率略高(34.9%)。可以通过减少危害规划,如美沙酮维持治疗(MMT)和针头注射器交换规划(NSEP),减少和预防艾滋病毒传播。我们试图确定美沙酮剂量与缅甸MMT项目客户注射行为之间的关系。方法采用分层随机抽样的方法,从5个城市共招募2.1万名有至少6个月美沙酮治疗史的MMT患者进行横断面研究。采用半结构化问卷和时间倒流量表(TLFB)。还对答复者进行了非法药物使用的筛选。结果近三分之二(63.5%,n=132)的患者每日美沙酮用量小于或等于80mg/d, 36.5% (n=76)的患者每日美沙酮用量大于80mg,而本研究样本平均日美沙酮用量为83mg (20mg ~ 300mg /d)。结果显示,美沙酮剂量与HIV感染、抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)和结核病(TB)治疗史、近30天海洛因注射史、共用针头史、就业成瘾严重程度以及THC(大麻)和苯二氮卓类药物使用史相关(p < 0.05)。此外,美沙酮高剂量组(大于80mg/d)海洛因注射频率比美沙酮低剂量组减少了4倍(注射IRR=0.0029 vs. 0.0118, p=0.0000)。与此同时,与低剂量美沙酮相比,服用高剂量美沙酮的艾滋病毒感染者报告危险注射行为减少的可能性高2.6倍。结论在缅甸MMT项目中,高剂量的处方美沙酮(超过80mg/天)似乎可以降低HIV阴性和阳性客户的HIV注射风险行为。
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Higher methadone dose reduces risky drug injecting behaviours among methadone clients in Myanmar

Background

HIV prevalence rate among people who inject drugs (PWIDs) in Myanmar is marginally high (34.9%). HIV transmission can be reduced and prevented through harm reduction programs such as methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) and needle syringe exchange program (NSEP). We sought to determine the relationship between methadone dose and injecting behaviours among clients enrolled in the MMT program in Myanmar.

Method

A total of 210 MMT clients, who had a minimum of six-month methadone treatment history, were recruited from five cities through stratified random sampling for this cross-sectional study. A semi-structured questionnaire with the timeline flow back (TLFB) scale was administered. Respondents were also screened for illicit drug use.

Results

Almost two-thirds (63.5%, n=132) received less than or equal to 80mg/day of methadone dose, and 36.5% (n=76) received more than 80mg of methadone daily, while the sample average daily methadone dose in this study was 83mg (ranging from 20mg to 300mg per day). The results indicated that methadone dose was associated with having HIV infection, antiretroviral therapy (ART) and tuberculosis (TB) treatment history, heroin injection history in the last 30 days, needle sharing history, addiction severity on employment, as well as THC (cannabis) and benzodiazepine use history (p<0.05). In addition, those who received a high methadone dose (more than 80mg/day) reduced their heroin injection use by 4 times compared to heroin injection frequency of respondents on low methadone dose (injection IRR=0.0029 vs. 0.0118, p=0.0000). Meanwhile, those who had HIV on high methadone dose were 2.6 times more likely to report reduction in risky injecting behaviours compared to low methadone dose.

Conclusion

A higher dose of methadone on prescription (more than 80mg/day) seems to reduce risky HIV injecting behaviours among both HIV negative and positive clients in MMT programs in Myanmar.

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来源期刊
Emerging trends in drugs, addictions, and health
Emerging trends in drugs, addictions, and health Pharmacology, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Forensic Medicine, Drug Discovery, Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (General)
CiteScore
2.40
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0.00%
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0
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