INTRODUCTION
Cohort studies in young drug users make it possible to monitor trends in patterns of consumption, risk behaviours, and the prevalence and incidence of different health problems, among them, HIV, HCV and other viral infections. Including young people in such studies also allows a more complete analysis of the trajectory of risk exposure, a subject of considerable interest given that different studies have shown that the prevalence of risk behaviours and the prevalence and incidence of HIV and HCV injection is higher among younger people and in the first years after beginning to inject [Reference Nicolosi1–Reference Hahn7]. These studies have shown that, although HIV prevalence and incidence were initially higher in women than in men, in both injectors and non-injectors, the prevalence has tended to even out in most of the studies recently carried out in the United States, and in some studies it has even been higher in men [Reference Strathdee and Sherman8]. In other places, like Vancouver [Reference Spittal9] or Amsterdam [Reference Welp10], women continue to have a higher risk of infection. Furthermore, several studies carried out in the United States in recent years have shown that some sexual behaviours were the main determinants of the prevalence or incidence of infection among injectors, in both men and women [Reference Strathdee and Sherman8, Reference Shafer11–Reference Doherty13]. Practically all recent cohort studies with active periodic follow-up in young community-recruited drug users are being carried out in North America (the United States or Canada), whereas in Europe there has only been one study in Holland [Reference Welp10] and another in the United Kingdom [Reference Judd14]. Other existing cohorts are based in treatment centres, with follow-up only of those who voluntarily go back for monitoring, and generally a very limited amount of information on risk behaviours is collected [15]. Furthermore, most of these studies focus exclusively on drug injectors and not on those who use the same substances by other routes, despite the fact that these population groups share many of the same epidemiological characteristics.
For many years Spain has had the largest number of AIDS cases of any country in the European Union, as well as one of the highest prevalences of HIV infection [15, 16]. In addition, use of the injected route was found almost exclusively among heroin users, and was practically non-existent among persons who were not regular current or past users of this substance [Reference de la Fuente17]. However, epidemiological phenomena of considerable importance began to take place in the mid-1980s, such as the progressive replacement of the injected route by the diffusion of smoking as the main route of heroin use [18], together with the implementation of harm-reduction programmes [Reference de la Fuente19]. These phenomena may have affected the level of HIV infection as well as its occurrence by gender and patterns of heroin consumption.
This study determines the prevalence of HIV infection, differences by gender, and the main factors associated with infection in young adult heroin users, including both users who had ever injected (injecting heroin users or IHUs) and those who had never injected (non-injecting heroin users or NIHUs), in three large Spanish cities: Barcelona, Madrid and Seville.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study design and population
The Itinere Project is a cohort study in young adult, regular current users of heroin in three Spanish cities: Barcelona, Madrid and Seville. These cities were chosen for two reasons: (1) Their geographic location: Madrid, in the centre of the country; Barcelona, 600 km to the northeast; and Seville, 600 km to the southeast, each city belonging to a different region. (2) They were thought to represent three very different epidemiological profiles with respect to the main route of heroin administration: Barcelona, where the intravenous route still predominated; Madrid, where smoking had been the most frequently employed route since the mid-1990s; and Seville, where smoking had predominated since the end of the 1980s [Reference de la Fuente17].
Inclusion criteria for the study were age between 18 and 30 years, having used heroin at least 12 days in the last 12 months, and at least 1 day in the last 3 months, and residence in the metropolitan area of one of the study cities during most of the last 12 months.
Participants also had to have sufficient knowledge of Spanish to be able to answer the questionnaire easily, and to sign an informed consent document approved by the Ethics Committee of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, acknowledging their voluntary participation in the study.
Recruitment
The entire sample was street recruited, using targeted sampling [Reference Watters20] and chain-referral methods; recruitment from socio-health services for the treatment of drug problems was avoided. The first links in the chain were recruited directly by anthropologists and social workers belonging to the research team who worked at known points of drug purchases or meeting places of drug users, and by key persons who knew or worked in these settings. Many of these key persons or recruiters were ex-users or users who could not participate in the study because they did not meet the inclusion criteria – generally because they were older than 30 years. They were paid for each drug user contacted who participated in the study. The rest of the sample was recruited by respondent-driven sampling (RDS) [Reference Heckathorn21, Reference Watters20], consisting of an incentive-driven chain-referral procedure that combined incentives for recruiting other participants into the study and rewards for being interviewed.
Data collection
Users had a face-to-face, computer-assisted interview, using a structured, largely pre-coded questionnaire with some open questions. The section on sexual behaviour was administered by computer-assisted self interviewing (Audio-CASI) for all participants except those who even with this assistance did not have sufficient reading abilities to understand the questions properly. This allowed greater privacy in answering the section considered most sensitive. The questionnaire covered in considerable detail the aspects included in the present analysis: sociodemographic characteristics, social conflict, patterns of use of different psychoactive substances, initiation into injection, injection risk behaviours, sexual risk behaviours (differentiating the behaviours by gender and analysing homosexual behaviours in males), and knowledge of HIV status, including dates of testing and knowledge of seropositivity. It also included other sections related with the level of drug dependence, overdoses and other health problems – both physical and mental – related with drug use, health-related quality of life, and social support. In general, two basic reference periods were used: lifetime and last 12 months before the interview, although for some variables subjects were asked to indicate when the behaviour or event investigated had last occurred.
A dried blood sample was obtained from all participants, and it was explained that results were not for diagnostic purposes and would be used only for the study. At the same time, participants were informed of how to obtain free services at centres for the diagnosis and treatment of drug-related health problems. In many cases, such services were offered at the same centres where the interviews took place, but at a different time. Participants were paid €18 at the end of the interview.
The interviews took place between April 2001 and December 2003 in health and social centres (medical or nursing consultations, social work departments, neighbourhood or district social centres, etc.), and in a very few cases in centres that could be identified directly with drug users (e.g. treatment centres). In the latter cases, it was clearly explained that the study was completely independent of the centre and that no information obtained in the interview would be conveyed to the treatment team.
Laboratory methods
Determination of HIV antibodies in the dried blood sample was made by commercial ELISAs (ELISA Genscreen HIV1/2 version 2 and New Lav Blot 1; Bio-Rad, Marnes-la-Coquette, France). Given that in the preliminary analysis of the results, the positive predictive value of the self-reports was over 99%, only positive samples from those who stated they were HIV negative or who had not had a previous test were confirmed by Western blot.
Statistical analysis
A descriptive analysis was made of the principal sociodemographic and injection characteristics of the sample. The prevalence of HIV infection and the 95% confidence intervals (CI) were then calculated by city, sex, and by IHUs/NIHUs. All subsequent analyses were performed separately for IHUs and NIHUs. First, a bivariate analysis was performed to estimate the prevalence of HIV infection by different sociodemographic variables, and by variables related with patterns of drug use and injection, sexual behaviours, injection behaviours, and other risk behaviours. The Mantel–Haenzel odds ratio (OR) and the 95% CI were calculated to evaluate the magnitude of the association [Reference Breslow and Day22]. We then carried out a multivariate logistic regression analysis following the methodology proposed by Hosmer & Lemeshow [Reference Hosmer and Lemeshow23]. Separate models were constructed for IHUs and NIHUs. Initially, the models included those variables whose significance in the bivariate analysis was <0·25, and the likelihood-ratio test was used to evaluate the contribution of each variable to the model. Finally, we evaluated the relevant first-degree interactions. In IHUs, separate models were made for men and women in order to evaluate gender differences and to explore the effect of sexual relations between men. This analysis was not made for NIHUs, due to the small number of women in this subgroup.
Given the limited number of outcomes and the potential interacting correlates, the analysis of associated factors in NIHUs was also performed by classification and regression tree analysis (C&RT). This is a non-parametric statistical procedure that identifies mutually exclusive subgroups whose members share common characteristics that influence the dependent variable (in this case, HIV prevalence). The C&RT procedure examines all possible independent or splitting variables and selects the one that results in binary groups that are most highly differentiated with respect to the dependent variable, according to a predetermined splitting criterion (in our case, the Gini index). This method appears to have affinity with the way clinicians make decisions [Reference Lemon24, Reference Marshall25]. The procedure was performed with the SPSS module Answer Tree 2.0 [26].
RESULTS
Sociodemographic characteristics of the global sample
The cross-sectional cohort study of the Itinere Project recruited 991 heroin users, however, the present analysis includes only the 961 for whom a HIV result was available from the dried-blood sample: 351 in Barcelona, 422 in Madrid and 188 in Seville. The mean age of those recruited was 25·7 years and the median was 26·0 years; 72·7% were men, 10·3% were ‘non-Spanish nationals’, and 45·5% had primary educational level or less (maximum of 5 years of elementary school – until age 11). During the last 12 months, 31·5% had worked most of the time, and 14% had lived in an institution or were homeless. In total, 41·8% had been in prison at some time; 64·6% (621) had injected at some time (IHUs), and 35·4% (340) had never injected (NIHUs).
HIV prevalence
A total of 80·2% (95% CI 78·0–83·1) knew their serological status, a percentage that was significantly higher among injectors than among non-injectors (88·4%, 95% CI 86·3–91·4 vs. 66·6%, 95% CI 60·3–70·7).
HIV prevalence in the whole group of users was 18·2% (95% CI 15·7–20·7) with significant differences by city (Fig. 1): Seville (9·6%, 95% CI 5·1–14·0), Barcelona (17·1%, 95% CI 13·0–21·2) and Madrid (23·0%, 95% CI 18·9–27·1). These overall prevalences are basically determined by the percentage of IHUs in each city: only 33% in Seville, 65% in Madrid, and 80% in Barcelona. The prevalence of HIV infection in IHUs was 25·8% (95% CI 22·3–29·3); the percentage was similar in Barcelona (20·5%, 95% CI 15·6–25·4) and Seville (20·6%, 95% CI 9·8–31·4), and higher in Madrid (32·4%, 95% CI 26·6–38·1). The prevalence in NIHUs was 4·0% (95% CI 2·1–6·7), with no significant differences among cities.
HIV prevalence was higher in women (22·9%, 95% CI 17·6–28·2) than in men (16·4%, 95% CI 13·6–19·3) (P=0·02), mainly due to the significant difference in the prevalence among NIHUs: 10·9% (95% CI 4·3–17·5 ) in women vs. just 1·7% (95% CI 0·5–4·2) in men. Although difference in the prevalence between male and female IHUs was of considerable magnitude (30·4%, 95% CI 23·0–37·8 vs. 24·1%, 95% CI 20·1–28·1 respectively), it was not statistically significant (Fig. 2). In short-term injectors (those who had injected for no more than 5 years), the prevalence was 12·9% (95% CI 8·8–17·02).
Correlates of HIV infection in IHUs
Crude analysis
The following factors were significantly associated with higher HIV prevalence: (a) sociodemographic factors: age >25 years, Spanish nationality, residence in the city of Madrid, and ever having been in prison; (b) patterns of drug use: cocaine binges, mainly by the injected route in the last 12 months; having ever sniffed or having sniffed in the last 12 months with used tubes or other devices; (c) sexual behaviours: having traded sex ever or in the last 12 months, having had a steady partner in the last 12 months who had ever injected drugs or traded sex, and having none or no more than two occasional partners in the last 12 months; (d) other risk behaviours: having received tattoos or piercings (Table 1); (e) patterns of injecting and injecting risk behaviours: injecting as the first main route of heroin administration, age <18 years at first injection, >5 years since first injection, having injected powdered cocaine weekly in the last 12 months, and ever having injected with a used syringe (Table 2).
Multivariate analysis
The variables most strongly and positively associated with HIV infection were: ever having injected with used syringes (OR 3·4, 95% CI 2·2–5·3), ever having been in prison (OR 2·6, 95% CI 1·6–4·0), female sex (OR 1·9, 95% CI 1·2–3·1), and heroin as the first drug injected weekly (OR 2·3, 95% CI 1·1–4·5). Having injected for >5 years in Madrid (interaction between length of injection and city) almost reached significance (OR 2·3, 95% CI 0·9–6·1). Having sniffed drugs with used devices (OR 0·5, 95% CI 0·3–0·8) and having had piercings (OR 0·6, 95% CI 0·4–1·0) were inversely associated with being HIV positive (Table 3). The models by gender did not show any important differences. Nor were homosexual relations between men found to be associated with HIV prevalence in a model restricted to men who had injected for ⩽5 years.
Correlates of HIV infection in NIHUs
Crude analysis
Only female sex, ever having traded sex or having done so in the last 12 months, and having had a stable partner in the last 12 months who had ever injected were significantly associated with higher HIV prevalence. Age >25 years almost reached statistical significance (Table 1).
Multivariate analysis
The only variable significantly associated with infection was female sex (OR 8·7, 95% CI 2·6–29·2). Age >25 years (OR 3·1, 95% CI 0·9–11·1) was close to reaching significance. Conversely, primary or lower educational level was associated with a lower risk of infection (OR 0·3, 95% CI 0·1–0·9) (Table 3).
Tree analysis
Gender was also the strongest predictive variable in the tree analysis. In women, this process then chose age and subsequently the variable city in persons aged ⩽25 years, and having been in prison in those >25 years. This led to three final groups with different prevalences: Group I, with a high prevalence (33%): women >25 years who had been in prison. Group II, with a medium prevalence (8–12%): women >25 years who had not been in prison, and women <25 years in Madrid or Seville; and Group III, with a low prevalence (<2%): women <25 years from Barcelona, and all the men (Fig. 3).
DISCUSSION
This study offers important findings about HIV infection in young, community-recruited heroin users in Spain. These results may well represent the HIV situation in young adult heroin users throughout the country [Reference de la Fuente17]. In fact, during the last two decades in Spain, ‘injectors’ was synonymous with ‘heroin users’, given that drug injection occurred almost exclusively among users of this drug. Data from some studies of injectors [Reference Bravo27] and all the ethnographic work carried out for the recruitment process in our 2001–2003 study confirmed that there were virtually no injectors of other substances (especially cocaine) who did not use heroin often enough to meet the inclusion criteria required in our study.
The first important finding is confirmation that the prevalence of HIV infection in IHUs remains high. Nevertheless, in comparison with another study made in 1995 in these same cities [Reference de la Fuente28, Reference de la Fuente29], the prevalence is half of what it was in Barcelona and Seville, although it remains about the same in Madrid. The prevalence in NIHUs, on the other hand, is almost six times lower than in injectors.
The second finding is that for both IHUs and especially NIHUs, the prevalence is higher in women, and these differences are even larger after adjusting for the sociodemographic and behavioural factors. The combined analysis of these findings reflects a situation in sharp contrast to what Strathdee and colleagues describe in a reanalysis of various studies in North America [Reference Strathdee and Sherman8, Reference Shafer11, Reference Kral30, Reference Gyarmathy31], which shows that the differences in HIV prevalence and incidence between IDUs and NIDUs, and between men and women, are not as high as in Spain. Furthermore, in studies restricted to IDUs, certain sexual behaviours (prostitution, having injecting partners, men who have sex with men, etc.) [Reference Strathdee and Sherman8, Reference Doherty13] practically always emerge as significant correlates of HIV prevalence in the logistic analyses, indicating the important role that sexual behaviours may be playing in HIV transmission among IDUs.
In the present study, however, the considerable difference in HIV prevalence between women and men in IHUs, and especially in NIHUs, together with the low prevalence of infection found among male NIHUs, leads us to believe that sexual behaviours are an important determinant of prevalence only in women, both in IHUs and NIHUs. In fact, no sexual behaviour was found to be associated with infection in the logistic analysis, not even homosexual relations between men when the analysis was restricted to injecting males with no more than 5 years of injection.
Nevertheless, it should be noted that this study has certain limitations in its ability to detect specific sexual behaviours that act as significant predictors: some behaviours refer only to the 12-month period before the interview, and among the NIHUs there were only 15 persons who were HIV positive, and only 101 women. It is possible that some of the persons classified as NIHUs in Madrid or Seville were in fact previous injectors, because injection has not been the predominant route for a number of years. It does not seem reasonable to suppose that this hypothetical misclassification would occur more in women than in men, since the differences in prevalence were also seen in Barcelona where injection is the predominant route. The differences between our results and those in the United States, may lie in the percentage of men in the present study who had sex with men (9·1% in IHUs and 4·6% in NIHUs), and especially in the number of men who had traded sex with other men (4·7% in IHUs and 1·6% in NIHUs), as well as the percentage who had had an injecting partner (19% in IHUs and 4·6% in NIHUs), all of which are much lower than what was found in the United States. However, the percentage of Spanish women who had had an IHU partner in the last 12 months (63·8% in IHUs and 22·7% in NIHUs) or who had ever traded sex (31·7% in IHUs and 17·7% in NIHUs) is much higher than in men (13·1% and 6·7%).
The third important finding is that, even after adjusting for the variables included in the model, IHUs who had been in prison had a 2·6 times greater risk of being infected than those who had never been in prison. This fact had been described in studies carried out in the early years of the epidemic [Reference Zunzunegui, Rodríguez and Sarasqueta32]. It is noteworthy that this situation is still found in young injectors, even after adjusting for years since first injection (or in the model restricted to young injectors). Part of this effect could be due to imprisonment acting as a proxy for other variables that we cannot control but that would define a risk behaviour profile in all areas of behaviour. It may also indicate that there continues to be an increased risk of infection in Spanish prisons, either because there is more injection with used syringes, or because the probability that the syringe has been used by an infected person is very high (given the high prevalence of infection among injectors in prison). If this is true, it suggests that, even in recent years, infections have occurred that were clearly preventable if exchange programmes had been implemented more efficiently and rapidly. Access to sterile syringes is legal in all Spanish prisons. However, an analysis of how this process has been implemented and the number of syringes exchanged [Reference Lines33] leads to the suspicion that it has developed very slowly, that the number of potential injectors may be much higher than that of real users, and that its development has an enormous symbolic value, but a very limited capacity for prevention if the current parameters of use are maintained.
The explanation for the fact that the adjusted model in IHUs shows that having sniffed with used tubes or devices or having had piercings are inversely associated with infection could perhaps be that these variables are merely indicators of a lower frequency of injection or sexual risk behaviours which have not been adequately collected in the variables introduced in the model.
This study has limitations inherent in the nature of a study of this type: a cross-sectional study in a population difficult to access, lacking a clear sampling framework, and in which most of the information is derived from self-reports. In all such studies it is very difficult to evaluate how representative the sample is. Even though intensive efforts were made to reach all possible drug use sites, the more sporadic and ‘normalized’ users are under-represented. Although this type of bias may have a large impact on epidemics in expansion, the evidence gathered in our field work, together with that derived from a combined analysis of various information sources, all of which show a very low incidence of new users in the heroin epidemic in Spain [18] suggests that this was a minimal problem in the present study. The social desirability bias may have led to under-reporting of risk in injection behaviours, while the use of Audio-CASI may have helped to minimize under-reporting of sexual risk behaviours. The fact that interviews were held outside the drug social services setting may also have helped to reduce this bias.
CONCLUSIONS
This investigation has shown that, despite important geographic differences, the prevalence of HIV in IHUs continues to be high in young adult drug injectors in Spain, even in short-term IHUs. In NIHUs, on the other hand, the prevalence is almost six times lower. In both IHUs and NIHUs, women had higher prevalences than men, but this difference was especially notable in NIHUs. In fact, one could almost say that the problem of HIV infection in non-injecting users in Spain is primarily a problem for women, given the very high percentage who have a stable injecting partner. Consequently, a wide range of strategies targeting both men and women should be developed to raise their awareness of the risk of sexual relations and specifically aimed at empowering women to negotiate safe sex.
APPENDIX. The Project Itinere Group
Rosario Ballesta, Sylvina Bassani, Francisco Bru, Yolanda Castellano, Antonia Domingo-Salvany, David Fernández, Victoria Jiménez, Daniel Lacasa Eusebio Mejías, Montserrat Neira, José Pulido, Luis Royuela, Sofía Ruiz, Fernando Sánchez.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was supported financially by Fundación para Investigación y la Prevención del Sida en España (fipse 3035/99); analysis was also funded by RTIC (FIS C03-091-Red de trastornos adictivos (RTA) and FIS G03-005-Red de Centros de Investigación en Epidemiología y Salud Pública (RECEPS). We gratefully acknowledge the contribution of the persons and institutions who were involved in participant recruitment and follow-up, who allowed us the use of their centres for the interviews, and who helped with project management: In Madrid: Fundación de Ayuda contra la Drogadicción (FAD), Programas Municipales de Sida e Instituto de las Adicciones, Médicos del Mundo, CAID de Torrejón de Ardoz, Centro Sanitario Sandoval, Subdirección General de Sanidad de Instituciones Penitenciarias, Agencia Antidroga. In Barcelona: ABD, Spott, Ambit, CECAS, Secretaria de Serveis Penitenciaris, Rehabilitació i Justícia Juvenil. In Seville: Ayuntamiento de Sevilla, Centros de Tratamiento Ambulatorios de Drogodependencias de la Diputación Provincial de Sevilla, Centro Tratamiento Alcoholismo Anclaje, Antaris, Centro de Día AVAT, Asociación Aspad. We also thank Kathryn M. Fitch for translation and suggestions.
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
None.