The impact of blood-borne viruses on cause-specific mortality among opioid dependent people : an Australian population-based cohort study

Claire M. Vajdic, Sadaf Marashi Pour, Jake Olivier, Alexander Swart, Dianne L. O'Connell, Michael O. Falster, Nicola S. Meagher, Limin Mao, Andrew E. Grulich, Deborah A. Randall, Janaki Amin, Lucinda Burns, Louisa Degenhardt

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    18 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Blood-borne viruses (BBV) are prevalent among people with opioid dependence but their association with cause-specific mortality has not been examined at the population-level. Methods: We formed a population-based cohort of 29,571 opioid substitution therapy (OST) registrants in New South Wales, Australia, 1993-2007. We ascertained notifications of infection and death by record linkage between the Pharmaceutical Drugs of Addiction System (OST data), registers of hepatitis C (HCV), hepatitis B (HBV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) diagnoses, and the National Death Index. We used competing risks regression to quantify associations between notification for BBV infection and causes of death. BBV status, age, year, OST status, and OST episodes were modelled as time-dependent covariates; sex was a fixed covariate. Results: OST registrants notified with HCV infection were more likely to die from accidental overdose (subdistribution hazard ratio, 95% Confidence Interval: 1.7, 1.5-2.0), cancer (2.0, 1.3-3.2) and unintentional injury (1.4, 1.0-2.0). HBV notification was associated with a higher hazard of mortality due to unintentional injury (2.1, 1.1-3.9), cancer (2.8, 1.5-5.5), and liver disease (2.1, 1.0-4.3). Liver-related mortality was higher among those notified with HIV only (11, 2.5-50), HCV only (5.9, 3.2-11) and both HIV and HCV (15, 3.2-66). Registrants with an HIV notification had a higher hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality (4.0, 1.6-9.9). Conclusions: Among OST registrants, BBVs are a direct cause of death and also a marker of behaviours that can result in unintended death. Ongoing and enhanced BBV prevention strategies and treatment, together with targeted education strategies to reduce risk, are justified.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)264-271
    Number of pages8
    JournalDrug and Alcohol Dependence
    Volume152
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • Australia
    • bloodborne viruses
    • mortality
    • opioid abuse
    • viruses

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