Journal of the International AIDS Society (Jul 2024)

A cross‐sectional assessment of injection of “salts” and HIV transmission‐related behaviours among a cohort of people who inject drugs in Kyrgyzstan

  • Rebecca Kennedy,
  • Zachary Bouck,
  • Dan Werb,
  • Ainura Kurmanalieva,
  • Anna Blyum,
  • Natalya Shumskaya,
  • Thomas L. Patterson,
  • Javier A. Cepeda,
  • Laramie R. Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.26247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Despite the increasing availability of new psychoactive substances (hereafter referred to as “salts”) in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, there is a dearth of epidemiological data on the relationship between injecting “salts” and HIV risk behaviours. This is particularly relevant in settings where injection drug use accounts for a substantial proportion of the HIV burden, such as in Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet Republic. This study assessed whether injecting “salts” is associated with sexual and injection‐related HIV risk behaviours among people who inject drugs in Kyrgyzstan. Methods The Kyrgyzstan InterSectional Stigma Study is a cohort of people who inject drugs in Kyrgyzstan's capital of Bishkek and the surrounding rural administrative division of Chuy Oblast. We conducted a cross‐sectional analysis using survey data collected from cohort participants between July and November 2021, which included information on injection drug use (including “salts”) and HIV risk behaviours. To minimize confounding by measured covariates, we used inverse‐probability‐weighted logistic and Poisson regression models to estimate associations between recent “salt” injection and HIV risk behaviours. Results Of 181 participants included in the analysis (80.7% men, 19.3% women), the mean age was 40.1 years (standard deviation [SD] = 8.8), and 22% (n = 39) reported that they had injected “salts” in the past 6 months. Among people who injected “salts,” 72% (n = 28) were men, and most were ethnically Russian 59% (n = 23), with a mean age of 34.6 (SD = 9.6). Injecting “salts” was significantly associated with a greater number of injections per day (adjusted relative risk [aRR] = 1.59, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.30−1.95) but lower odds of using syringe service programmes in the past 6 months (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.20, 95% CI = 0.12−0.32). Injecting “salts” was also significantly associated with lower odds of condomless sex in the past 6 months (aOR = 0.42, 95% CI = 0.24−0.76) and greater odds of having ever heard of pre‐exposure prophylaxis (aOR = 4.80, 95% CI = 2.61−8.83). Conclusions (PWID) people who inject drugs who inject “salts” are a potentially emergent group with increased HIV acquisition risk in Kyrgyzstan. Targeted outreach bundled with comprehensive harm reduction and pre‐exposure prophylaxis services are needed to prevent transmission of HIV and other blood‐borne viruses.

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