Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial

Abstract Background Cigarette smoking has emerged as a leading cause of mortality among people with hepatitis C virus (HCV). People who inject drugs (PWID) represent the largest group of adults infected with HCV in the US. However, cigarette smoking remains virtually unexplored among this population...

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Main Authors: Irene Pericot-Valverde, Moonseong Heo, Matthew J. Akiyama, Brianna L. Norton, Linda Agyemang, Jiajing Niu, Alain H. Litwin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-12-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
HCV
DAA
SVR
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-020-05667-3
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spelling doaj-b0009318ba7f4d9d87e8f177c727f3522020-12-06T12:08:37ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342020-12-0120111110.1186/s12879-020-05667-3Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trialIrene Pericot-Valverde0Moonseong Heo1Matthew J. Akiyama2Brianna L. Norton3Linda Agyemang4Jiajing Niu5Alain H. Litwin6School of Health Research, Clemson UniversityDepartment of Public Health Sciences, College of Behavioral, Social, and Health Sciences, Clemson UniversityAlbert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical CenterAlbert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical CenterAlbert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical CenterSchool of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, College of Science, Clemson UniversitySchool of Health Research, Clemson UniversityAbstract Background Cigarette smoking has emerged as a leading cause of mortality among people with hepatitis C virus (HCV). People who inject drugs (PWID) represent the largest group of adults infected with HCV in the US. However, cigarette smoking remains virtually unexplored among this population. This study aimed at (1) determining prevalence and correlates of cigarette smoking among HCV-infected PWID enrolled in opiate agonist treatment programs; (2) exploring the association of smoking with HCV treatment outcomes including adherence, treatment completion and sustained virologic response (SVR); and 3) exploring whether cigarette smoking decreased after HCV treatment. Methods Participants were 150 HCV-infected PWID enrolled in a randomized clinical trial primarily designed to test three intensive models of HCV care. Assessments included sociodemographics, presence of chronic health and psychiatric comorbidities, prior and current drug use, quality of life, and HCV treatment outcomes. Results The majority of the patients (84%) were current cigarette smokers at baseline. There was a high prevalence of psychiatric and medical comorbidities in the overall sample of PWID. Alcohol and cocaine use were identified as correlates of cigarette smoking. Smoking status did not influence HCV treatment outcomes including adherence, treatment completion and SVR. HCV treatment was not associated with decreased cigarette smoking. Conclusions The present study showed high prevalence of cigarette smoking among this population as well as identified correlates of smoking, namely alcohol and cocaine use. Cigarette smoking was not associated with HCV treatment outcomes. Given the detrimental effects that cigarette smoking and other co-occurring, substance use behaviors have on HCV-infected individuals’ health, it is imperative that clinicians treating HCV also target smoking, especially among PWID. The high prevalence of cigarette smoking among PWID will contribute to growing morbidity and mortality among this population even if cured of HCV. Tailored smoking cessation interventions for PWID along with HCV treatment may need to be put into clinical practice. Trial registration NCT01857245 . Registered May 20, 2013.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-020-05667-3HCVDAASmokingSVRPWID
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Irene Pericot-Valverde
Moonseong Heo
Matthew J. Akiyama
Brianna L. Norton
Linda Agyemang
Jiajing Niu
Alain H. Litwin
spellingShingle Irene Pericot-Valverde
Moonseong Heo
Matthew J. Akiyama
Brianna L. Norton
Linda Agyemang
Jiajing Niu
Alain H. Litwin
Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
BMC Infectious Diseases
HCV
DAA
Smoking
SVR
PWID
author_facet Irene Pericot-Valverde
Moonseong Heo
Matthew J. Akiyama
Brianna L. Norton
Linda Agyemang
Jiajing Niu
Alain H. Litwin
author_sort Irene Pericot-Valverde
title Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
title_short Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
title_full Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
title_fullStr Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Factors and HCV treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the PREVAIL randomized clinical trial
title_sort factors and hcv treatment outcomes associated with smoking among people who inject drugs on opioid agonist treatment: secondary analysis of the prevail randomized clinical trial
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Background Cigarette smoking has emerged as a leading cause of mortality among people with hepatitis C virus (HCV). People who inject drugs (PWID) represent the largest group of adults infected with HCV in the US. However, cigarette smoking remains virtually unexplored among this population. This study aimed at (1) determining prevalence and correlates of cigarette smoking among HCV-infected PWID enrolled in opiate agonist treatment programs; (2) exploring the association of smoking with HCV treatment outcomes including adherence, treatment completion and sustained virologic response (SVR); and 3) exploring whether cigarette smoking decreased after HCV treatment. Methods Participants were 150 HCV-infected PWID enrolled in a randomized clinical trial primarily designed to test three intensive models of HCV care. Assessments included sociodemographics, presence of chronic health and psychiatric comorbidities, prior and current drug use, quality of life, and HCV treatment outcomes. Results The majority of the patients (84%) were current cigarette smokers at baseline. There was a high prevalence of psychiatric and medical comorbidities in the overall sample of PWID. Alcohol and cocaine use were identified as correlates of cigarette smoking. Smoking status did not influence HCV treatment outcomes including adherence, treatment completion and SVR. HCV treatment was not associated with decreased cigarette smoking. Conclusions The present study showed high prevalence of cigarette smoking among this population as well as identified correlates of smoking, namely alcohol and cocaine use. Cigarette smoking was not associated with HCV treatment outcomes. Given the detrimental effects that cigarette smoking and other co-occurring, substance use behaviors have on HCV-infected individuals’ health, it is imperative that clinicians treating HCV also target smoking, especially among PWID. The high prevalence of cigarette smoking among PWID will contribute to growing morbidity and mortality among this population even if cured of HCV. Tailored smoking cessation interventions for PWID along with HCV treatment may need to be put into clinical practice. Trial registration NCT01857245 . Registered May 20, 2013.
topic HCV
DAA
Smoking
SVR
PWID
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-020-05667-3
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