-
PDF
- Split View
-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Elana S Rosenthal, Laura Nussdorf, Aaron D’Amore, Christopher Brokus, Rachel Silk, Rahwa Eyasu, Poonam Mathur, Phyllis Bijole, Miriam Jones, Randy Kier, David Sternberg, Henry Masur, Shyam Kottilil, Sarah Kattakuzhy, 2900. High Rates of Experienced and Witnessed Opioid Overdose in PWID Receiving HCV Treatment: Data From the ANCHOR Study, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, Volume 6, Issue Supplement_2, October 2019, Page S83, https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz359.178
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
People who inject drugs (PWID) have significant morbidity and mortality associated with hepatitis C (HCV); however, harms associated with ongoing injecting drug use (IDU)—such as opioid overdose—may pose a more imminent risk, and often are not addressed as part of HCV treatment. Naloxone distribution is a simple, evidenced-based strategy to reduce mortality associated with opioid overdose.
ANCHOR is a single-center study embedded in an urban harm-reduction program evaluating treatment of HCV in PWID with chronic HCV, opioid use disorder (OUD), and IDU. Participants received HCV treatment and were offered collocated buprenorphine. At each study visit, patients self-reported experienced and witnessed overdose and were offered naloxone.
The 100 enrolled participants are predominantly male (75%), median 57 years, black (93%) and inject opioids at least daily (58%). At baseline, 65% had ever experienced overdose, 91% had ever witnessed an overdose, and 35% had ever administered naloxone. Between day 0 and week 48, 15 patients (15%) experienced overdose; of which, 4 (4%) were fatal. The rate of experienced overdose was 15 overdoses per 100 person-years. In addition, 59 (59%) patients witnessed at least one overdose between day 0 and week 48. Seventy-three patients were dispensed naloxone at least once, and of those who witnessed an overdose, 48 (81%) administered naloxone. Nineteen (40%) patients who administered naloxone had never used naloxone before starting HCV treatment.
PWID with HCV, OUD, and ongoing IDU have high rates of personal and witnessed overdose during and after HCV treatment. Dispensing naloxone at HCV-related visits is highly acceptable among PWID, and results in high rates of naloxone utilization. To reduce morbidity and mortality in patients and their communities, ID providers should complement treatment of infections by prescribing naloxone for patients with OUD, ideally as part of a comprehensive package of harm reduction and OUD treatment.
All Authors: No reported Disclosures.
Session: 310. Hepatitis C: Progress on Elimination and Treatment
Saturday, October 5, 2019: 4:15 PM
- harm reduction
- hepatitis c, chronic
- hepatitis c
- buprenorphine
- complement system proteins
- disclosure
- naloxone
- overdose
- infections
- morbidity
- mortality
- poisoning by opiate or related narcotic
- drug usage
- opioid intoxication
- hepatitis c virus
- opioid use disorders
- opioids
- prescribing behavior
- community
- self-report
Comments