Two scientific lectures presented at the
Eighteenth International AIDS Conference in Vienna last week,
demonstrated that drug use in and of itself is linked to increased rates of HIV
transmission, giving support for evidence that substitution therapy programmes
could help to stem the HIV epidemic.
Currently, ten million injecting drug
users (IDUs) are living with the virus worldwide. While needle sharing is a
strong predictor of HIV seroconversion, non-injecting drug users also experience increased
rates of transmission when compared to the general population. This is a result
of drugs’ impact on brain chemistry and function, as they diminish inhibitory
responses and therefore lead to riskier behaviour.
Nora Volkow of the US National Institute on
Drug Abuse, or NIDA, noted, “the prevalence rates of substance abusers are in
many instances equivalent whether they inject or don’t inject.”
Charles O’Brien from the University of Pennsylvania
agreed, stating, “Even oral drugs greatly increase the risk of being… positive.”
As such, combating HIV transmission among non-injecting drug users “is even
more complex than addressing just injecting drug use, [in which] you only have
to address contaminated equipment”, said Volkow.
Discussing alcohol, cocaine, heroin and
methamphetamine use, Volkow noted that many drugs increase sexual desire and
impulsivity while decreasing the function of the inhibitory and controlling
systems of the brain, with acute and chronic drug use affecting the prefrontal
cortex. Brain and behaviour changes can often last several years after use is
discontinued.
Addiction is a “chronic disease”, said
Volkow. People take the drug “not because the individual [wants to], but
because they have lost their ability to control”.
According to O’Brien, the
notion that drug addiction is a disease of the brain is not a novel concept. “We have very good evidence [that
addiction] is governed in large measure by our genes. A lot of people who are
addicts are not guilty of anything that the rest of us don’t do, like
experimenting with drugs,” he said.
While “it should not be any surprise that
sexual behaviours increase when intoxicated”, the pinpointing of changing brain
behaviour and chemistry is a relatively new phenomenon, according to Volkow.
Such data demonstrate “that you actually can very specifically identify the
biochemical changes in the brain that lead us to understand the disruptive
behaviour”, she explained.
In addition to increasing the risk of HIV
transmission, some psychoactive drugs actually exacerbate the neurotoxic
effects of HIV. Volkow explained that this “combination of two very different
vectors… collide to disrupt [brain function] even further”.
Such findings provide further support for
substitution replacement therapy. “If you don’t treat addiction, the likelihood
of [an] individual being infected by HIV becomes higher,” said Volkow. Studies
have shown that full methadone treatment reduces the rate of HIV seroconversion
from 20 to 2% over 18 months. “We need to treat the drug users if we want to
treat HIV,” noted Volkow. “In fact, preventing drug use is treating HIV.”
Methadone replacement therapy, which is the
most effective treatment available today, is “much more than harm reduction”,
said O’Brien. “Methadone is rehabilitation.”
The therapy can be used far beyond simply
aiding in initially quitting drugs, with many former addicts “staying on
methadone for the rest of their lives”, said O’Brien. Addiction needs to be
treated “like high blood pressure and diabetes”, O’Brien noted. “It doesn’t
just go away because people have been treated,” he said. According to O’Brien,
long-term treatment “doesn’t interfere with normal behaviour” such as attending
school or holding down a steady job.
Several new substitution therapies are on
the market or in trials, including a vaccine that would block the effects of
drugs on the brain, therefore decreasing the likelihood of an individual
becoming addicted. Until new technologies become available, O’Brien encourages
current treatment to become more “accessible, acceptable, and affordable”.
In addition to diminishing drug use,
treating and preventing new infections among drug users is also a central
component to tackling the HIV epidemic.
Professor Julio Montaner, former president
of the International AIDS Society and a champion of HAART as prevention,
described HAART use among IDUs in Vancouver’s
Downtown Eastside neighborhood, which is home to the highest rates of drug use
and HIV in Canada.
Noting that high HIV viral load is actually
more predictive of HIV transmission than needle sharing, Montaner’s study
showed that by treating HIV-positive IDUs, community viral load decreased and
HIV incidence plummeted, despite the fact that drug use and other behaviours
such as unprotected sex persisted. As HAART was further expanded throughout the
study, the number of new infections continued to decrease.
While Montaner noted that increasing the
coverage of prevention methods such as behavioural interventions is necessary,
increased treatment is also essential to lessening a community’s HIV burden.
“This is not about medicalising prevention, this is about treating people who
need treatment [as well as] strengthening traditional ways of preventing HIV
including education, change in behaviour, harm reduction, and embracing new
strategies and technologies… if and when they become available,” he said.