By
Liz Highleyman
Hepatitis C
is common among current and former prison inmates, largely because sharing equipment
for injection drug use is an efficient means of transmitting the virus and people
are often imprisoned for drug-related offenses. It is estimated that somewhere
between 24% and 80% of inmates in Canadian federal correctional institutions are
infected with HCV.
Researchers
in British Columbia conducted a retrospective chart review of long-term outcomes
among hepatitis C patients treated through their clinic in Vancouver. The investigators
previously reported that hepatitis C patients can be successfully treated in correctional
institutions, but longer-term data are scarce.
The
present analysis included 479 individuals (96% men) who started treatment with
conventional or pegylated interferon
alfa (Pegasys or PegIntron) plus ribavirin between August 1999 and March 2009.
The
participants' mean age was 38 years, 70% were white, 24% were Canadian natives
or aboriginals, and 6% were of other racial/ethnic groups. 142 were considered
likely to have initially acquired HCV through injection drug use. Patients were
followed on average every 6 months, either in prison if they remained incarcerated
or in the community if they were released. Follow-up continued for up to 4 years.
Results
 | One-quarter
of the participants were lost to follow-up after starting treatment. |
 | Others
discontinued therapy due to non-response (13%) or adverse events (3%). |
 | Of
the 479 who started treatment, 187 (40%) achieved sustained virological response
(SVR; undetectable HCV viral load 6 months after completion of therapy). |
 | Among
110 sustained responders, 24 people (22%) became re-infected with HCV (most had
a different HCV genotype than befoe, indicating likely re-infection rather than
late relapse). |
 | The
major risk factors for re-infection were: |
 |  | Injection
drug use (76%); |  | Other
known risk factors including tattooing, piercing, sexual activity, or direct contact
with blood, for example during a fight (15%); |  | Unidentified
risk (9%). |
|
 | A
majority of re-infections occurred within the first year after achieving SVR (mean
47 weeks), but some occurred as long as 2 years later. |
The
researchers concluded that, "Re-infection is an emerging important consideration
for treatment of HCV in [injection drug users]." They added that the 24 cases
seen in this study is probably an underestimate, because many participants did
not return for follow-up visits, and individuals who resumed active drug use may
be more likely to fall into this group.
"Addressing
addiction issues must be an integral part of any successful program for treating
HCV in [injection drug users]," the investigators recommended. "Harm
reduction strategies should also be continually reinforced pre, during and post-treatment.
Otherwise, re-infection may decrease the overall effectiveness of the HCV treatment
program."
Dr John Farley Inc., Vancouver, Canada.
9/18/09
References
JD
Farley, L. Chinybayeva, and W Shum. Treatment of HCV Infection in Intravenous
Drug Users in Inmates of Correctional Institutions, Canada: Four Year Follow Up
- Significant Likelihood of Reinfection. 49th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009). San Francisco. September 12-15, 2009. Abstract
H-219.