Hepatitis C Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Staying Safe Intervention: Preventing HCV Among Young Opioid Injectors
The growing population of young people who inject drugs (PWID) is at extremely high risk for HCV infection through the use of contaminated injection equipment, yet, to date, no behavioral intervention has been sufficiently potent to produce significant reductions in HCV incidence among PWID. To address this critical public health need, our team developed Staying Safe (Ssafe), an innovative, strengths-based, socio-behavioral HCV prevention intervention found in preliminary research to be highly acceptable and feasible, with strong indications of efficacy. The proposed randomized, controlled trial will assess the effectiveness of the Ssafe intervention in reducing both injection-related HCV/HIV risk behavior and HCV incidence among young adults (ages 18-29) who inject opioids (heroin and/or prescription opioids).
HCV infection is the most common chronic blood-borne infection in the U.S., with the
overwhelming majority of new HCV infections occurring among people who inject drugs (PWID).
Sharing syringes and other injection equipment is the primary risk factor for HCV
transmission. HCV prevalence is extremely high in most U.S. PWID populations (typically
ranging from ~40-70%). Research shows that young PWID (under age 30) engage in particularly
high rates of risky injection, and that HCV incidence is highest in the first 3-5 years of an
individual's injection career. The national significance of this public health problem is
heightened by the recent epidemic of prescription opioid (PO) misuse in youth which has
evolved into widespread heroin use and injection drug use, creating a new generation of young
injectors at risk for HCV (and HIV). These trends demonstrate the urgent need for innovative
new approaches to HCV prevention tailored to the growing population of young PWID.
To date, no behavioral intervention has been sufficiently potent to produce significant
reductions in HCV incidence in at-risk groups of PWID. To address this critical gap, our team
developed Staying Safe (Ssafe), an innovative, strengths-based, socio-behavioral HCV
prevention intervention for young PWID. Ssafe addresses multi-level "upstream" determinants
of risk that occur relatively early in the causal chain of risk, including eco-social
conditions, social relations and risk situations, in addition to directly targeting risky
injection practices. Ssafe trains and motivates PWID to better manage drug use in order to
avoid situations and practices that promote risky injection (e.g., "binging" on drugs), and
to implement health-protective behaviors (e.g., promoting risk-reduction norms in injection
networks). In preliminary research we found Ssafe to be highly acceptable and feasible, with
strong indications of efficacy.
In this study we propose to conduct a randomized controlled trial to assess the effectiveness
of the Ssafe intervention (with a mobile phone-delivered booster application) in reducing
injection-related risk behavior and HCV incidence among 18-29 year-olds (n=456) who inject
opioids (heroin and/or POs) and test HCV and HIV antibody-negative at baseline. We
hypothesize that Ssafe will significantly reduce injection risk behaviors and HCV infections
relative to a time- and attention-matched control intervention. We will also examine whether
Ssafe's effects are mediated by (a) drug use management practices (injection frequency,
overdose, opioid intake, withdrawal episodes); (b) individual-level mechanisms of behavior
change (motivation/self-efficacy, planning skills); and (c) key upstream socio-structural and
network-level determinants of risk (social support, skills to avoid PWID-associated stigma,
drug treatment and SEP utilization, injection network size and risk norms). The proposed
trial promises to significantly advance our ability to prevent HCV infection in the growing
population of young, PO-initiated injectors.
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