Associations between the prevalence of chronic hepatitis B among people who inject drugs and country‐level characteristics: An ecological analysis

Author:

Syangbo Anjalee1,Hickman Matthew1,Colledge‐Frisby Samantha23,Leung Janni24ORCID,Grebely Jason5,Larney Sarah267ORCID,Degenhardt Louisa2ORCID,Trickey Adam1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Population Health Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

2. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

3. National Drug Research Institute Melbourne Australia

4. National Centre for Youth Substance Use Research The University of Queensland Brisbane Australia

5. Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

6. Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine University of Montreal Montreal Canada

7. Research Centre of the Hospital Centre of the University of Montreal Montreal Canada

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionGlobally, hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a leading cause of liver disease. People who inject drugs (PWID) are at greater risk than the general population of contracting HBV. This risk could depend on societal factors in different countries. We investigated the associations between country‐level chronic HBV prevalence in PWID with national indicators of development and prevalence of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV).MethodsWe used global systematic review data on chronic HBV prevalence (hepatitis B surface antigen‐positive) among PWID and country‐level sociodemographic characteristics from online databases. National random‐effects meta‐analysis estimates of HBV prevalence were the outcome in linear regression models testing for associations with country‐level characteristics.ResultsThe study included 131,710 PWID from 304 estimates in 55 countries: the pooled HBV prevalence among PWID in the countries analysed was 4.5% (95% CI 3.9–5.1), the highest regional pooled prevalence was in East and Southeast Asia (17.6% [13.3–22.3]), and the lowest was in Western Europe (1.7% [1.4–2.1]). In multivariable models, no indicators of development were associated with HBV prevalence, but there was evidence of positive associations between HBV prevalence in the general population and among PWID, and evidence of HIV and HCV prevalence in PWID being associated with HBV prevalence in PWID: multivariable coefficients 0.03 (95% CI 0.01–0.04); p < 0.001, and 0.01 (95% CI 0.00–0.03); p = 0.01, respectively.Discussion and ConclusionsHBV prevalence among PWID was associated with HIV and HCV prevalence among PWID and background HBV prevalence in the general population, highlighting the need for improving harm reduction in PWID and implementation of HBV vaccination, especially where HBV is endemic.

Funder

National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre

University of New South Wales

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)

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