OBJECTIVE: To describe geographic and methamphetamine drug use differences among young IDUs. METHODS: Longitudinal HIV risk survey and screening conducted by street-outreach in five metropolitan areas between 1997 and 1999. Three groups were examined by methamphetamine use and geographic location: Los Angeles methamphetamine injectors (LA-MA injectors), methamphetamine injectors elsewhere (non-LA MA injectors) and non-methamphetamine injectors from all study sites (non-MA injectors). FINDINGS: 2198 participants were recruited; 63% were male, median age 23 years, 53% Caucasian, 20% African-Americans, 19% Latinos, and 8% other/mixed. Heroin was most common substance injected across sites except LA where methamphetamine use was greatest. Overall HIV seroprevalence was 4.7%, and 1.1% (12/1051) seroconverted during follow-up. Highest HIV prevalence was observed among LA MA injectors (6.1%) followed by non-MA injectors (4.9%) and non-LA MA injectors (2.4%, p < 0.10). The highest proportion of seroconverters was observed among LA MA injectors (3.1%), followed by non-MA injectors (1.0%), and no seroconversion detected among non-LA MA injectors (p < 0.05). Among LA MA injectors, all seroconverters were MSM; MSM comprised 25% of all seroconverters among non-MA injectors. After adjusting for HIV seroprevalence level across sites (low, intermediate, high), LA-MA injectors were 4 times more likely to seroconvert than non-MA injectors (OR=3.9; 95% C.I.=1.1,15.5). CONCLUSION. Methamphetamine injecting was associated with increased risk for HIV infection. The findings suggest that high-risk behaviors for HIV infection may differ by type of drug injected and geographic location. Ongoing, targeted surveillance may help elucidate specific patterns of HIV spread in high-risk subpopulations.
Learning Objectives: N/A
Keywords: HIV Risk Behavior, Injection Drug Users
Presenting author's disclosure statement:
Organization/institution whose products or services will be discussed: None
I do not have any significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with any organization/institution whose products or services are being discussed in this session.