Prioritising Hepatitis C treatment in people with multiple injecting partners maximises prevention: A real-world network study

Publication date

2020-02-01

Authors

Buchanan, Ryan
Meskarian, Rudabeh
van der Heijden, P.G.M.ISNI 0000000067738801
Grellier, Leonie
Parkes, Julie
Khakoo, Salim I.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Objective: To describe an injecting network of PWID living in an isolated community on the Isle of Wight (UK) and the results of a agent-based simulation, testing the effect of Hepatitis C (HCV) treatment on transmission. Method: People who inject drugs (PWID) were identified via respondent driven sampling and recruited to a network and bio-behavioural survey. The injecting network they described formed the baseline population and potential transmission pathways in an agent-based simulation of HCV transmission and the effects of treatment over 12 months. Results: On average each PWID had 2.6 injecting partners (range 0–14) and 137 were connected into a single component. HCV in the network was associated with a higher proportion of positive injecting partners (p = 0.003) and increasing age (p = 0.011). The treatment of well-connected PWID led to significantly fewer new infections of HCV than treating at random (10 vs. 7, p<0.001). In all scenarios less than one individual was re-infected. Conclusion: In our model the preferential treatment of well-connected PWID maximised treatment as prevention. In the real-world setting, targeting treatment to actively injecting PWID, with multiple injecting partners may therefore represent the most efficient elimination strategy for HCV.

Keywords

Computer simulation, Directly acting antivirals, Disease transmission, infectious, Drug users, Hepatitis C, Injecting network, Taverne, Microbiology (medical), Infectious Diseases, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Buchanan, R, Meskarian, R, van der Heijden, P G M, Grellier, L, Parkes, J & Khakoo, S I 2020, 'Prioritising Hepatitis C treatment in people with multiple injecting partners maximises prevention : A real-world network study', Journal of Infection, vol. 80, no. 2, pp. 225-231. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2019.12.010