Opioid substitution therapy combined with HIV treatment saves the lives of more drug users than ART alone

Michel Kazatchkine, UN Secretary-General Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia talks with Eduard Karamov, Ivanovsky Institute of Virology, Russian Federation. Photo ©Marcus Rose/IAS
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Providing opioid substitution therapy (OST) alongside antiretroviral therapy (ART) to people who inject drugs results in a significantly greater reduction in deaths compared to providing either intervention alone, a study of the Canadian province of British Columbia has shown.

The findings were presented by Dr Bohdan Nosyk and colleagues from the University of British Columbia Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS at the Eighth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2015) in Vancouver, Canada.

Research from Ukraine, also presented at the conference, showed that people receiving opioid substitution therapy had better engagement with HIV care.

Opioid substitution therapy is recommended by the World Health Organization as a core element of the harm reduction and care package that should be provided for people who inject drugs after diagnosis with HIV infection. There are big variations worldwide in access to opioid substitution therapy for people living with HIV who inject drugs: a 21-country survey, published in 2013, found average coverage of just 3% for this population.

"I don’t know of any other area of medicine where despite the evidence that the intervention works, someone says 'we’re not going to do that because I think that that is not right'." Dr Nora Volkow

Opioid substitution is resisted in many countries because of the belief that heroin addiction can only be treated by abstinence. Methadone substitution is illegal in the Russian Federation, a country with one of the most severe epidemics of HIV in people who inject drugs. Russian attitudes towards methadone are so hardened that OST programmes in Crimea were halted following Russian occupation of the region in 2014, Professor Michel Kazatchkine, UN Secretary General Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, told a plenary session at the conference.

Dr Nora Volkow, director of the United States National Institute on Drug Abuse told a press conference that opioid substitution therapy “is a win-win for prevention and a win-win for treatment, but there are too many places where it’s not happening… I don’t know of any other area of medicine where despite the evidence that the intervention works, someone says 'we’re not going to do that because I think that that is not right'.”

Opioid substitution therapy may be provided in the form of daily methadone or buprenorphine, and an extended-release buprenorphine implant is being tested with the aim of winning US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval.

OST has the potential to minimise drug-related harm by reducing the risk of drug overdose, reducing exposure to injecting-related bacterial infections and hepatitis C, stabilising drug users in order to address other health issues and allow comprehensive treatment of drug misuse. By reducing or eliminating dependency on heroin, OST reduces illicit drug consumption and has the potential to reduce the criminalisation of drug users.

British Columbia

Dr Nosyk and colleagues used data from the British Columbia HIV cohort database to examine the effects of opioid substitution therapy, antiretroviral therapy or both on mortality in people who inject drugs receiving HIV care between 1996 and 2010 in the province.

The cohort comprised 1727 people who inject drugs, of whom 28.5% died during a median follow-up period of 5.1 years (9913 person-years of follow up). In the majority of cases the cause of death was HIV-related (55%) but 18% died as a result of drug use, and the remainder of other causes.

The analysis found that although exposure to OST reduced the risk of HIV-related death by 80%, it did not significantly reduce the risk of death due to drug use in most statistical analyses.

In contrast, antiretroviral therapy independently reduced the risk of HIV-related death and death due to drug use, while receipt of both antiretroviral therapy and opioid substitution therapy had the greatest impact on mortality, reducing the risk of death by between 86% and 94%. People receiving both interventions were between one-half and one-third as likely to die as people receiving antiretroviral therapy alone.

OST in Ukraine

Research conducted in Ukraine shows that people who inject drugs who received OST were more likely to be engaged in HIV care, more likely to receive CD4 counts and more likely to receive antiretroviral therapy.

The cross-sectional study, conducted in nine HIV clinics in Ukraine in 2010, randomly sampled 296 HIV-positive people who were classified as opioid dependent. Sixty-five per cent were receiving opioid substitution therapy. Those receiving OST were significantly more likely to have hepatitis C. Those receiving OST had a significantly larger number of years of injecting drug use (12.8 years vs 8.6 years) and had spent longer in prison, on average (4 years vs 1.5 years). However, the two groups had a similar average duration since HIV diagnosis (five years).

Glossary

opioid substitution therapy (OST)

Providing users of an illegal drug (such as heroin) with a replacement drug (such as methadone, buprenorphine or naltrexone) under medical supervision. This helps the person reduce the frequency of injections and their dependency on illegal drugs. It is part of a harm reduction approach.

 

 

Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

Regulatory agency that evaluates and approves medicines and medical devices for safety and efficacy in the United States. The FDA regulates over-the-counter and prescription drugs, including generic drugs. The European Medicines Agency performs a similar role in the European Union.

statistical significance

Statistical tests are used to judge whether the results of a study could be due to chance and would not be confirmed if the study was repeated. If result is probably not due to chance, the results are ‘statistically significant’. 

pathogenesis

The origin and step-by-step development of disease.

person years

In a study “100 person years of follow-up” could mean that information was collected on 100 people for one year, or on 50 people for two years each, or on ten people over ten years. In practice, each person’s duration of follow-up is likely to be different.

Opioid substitution therapy was associated with lower reports of injecting in the previous 30 days and a lower number of injections if injecting drugs, significantly lower use of stimulants or multiple drugs, and vastly lower expenditure on drugs in the previous month ($10 vs $397 for those who did not receive OST).

Opioid substitution therapy was also associated with a significantly smaller number of visits to an emergency room in the previous six months, fewer HIV-related symptoms, better quality of life scores, and better self-evaluation of mental and physical health.

Among those receiving clinical care, receipt of opioid substitution therapy was associated with more recent CD4 testing, more recent testing for tuberculosis and a higher uptake of antiretroviral therapy (although this association was not statistically significant, p = 0.08).

References

Bachireddy C et al. The effect of opiate substitution therapy on healthcare utilization and engagement among HIV-infected people who inject drugs in Ukraine. Eighth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, Vancouver, abstract MOPDD0101, 2015.

You can download the slides of this presentation from the conference website

Nosyk B et al. The effects of opioid substitution treatment and highly active antiretroviral therapy on the cause-specific risk of mortality among injection drug using people living with HIV/AIDS.  Eighth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, Vancouver, abstract MOPDD0102.

You can download the slides of this presentation from the conference website.

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