An early-2015 outbreak of HIV and
hepatitis C virus (HCV) in rural Indiana, USA, linked to injection of
prescription opiates, offers a good example of how to track and contain a
localised outbreak, according to a pair of presentations at a late-breaking
prevention research session at the Eighth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV
Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2015) last month in Vancouver,
Canada. Attendees at the session stressed that we already know how to prevent
such outbreaks and called for implementation of needle exchange programmes and
other proven-effective harm reduction measures.
In January 2015, the Indiana State
Department of Health, later joined by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
began investigating an HIV outbreak after disease intervention specialists
confirmed nearly a dozen new infections in a rural community in Scott County,
near the Kentucky border – a community of 4200 residents that had only reported
five cases of HIV during the previous decade. Investigators traced the new
infections to people who inject oxymorphone, a prescription opioid or
opiate-like painkiller.
The CDC issued an official health
advisory about the outbreak in April, and CDC
and Indiana investigators published a brief
report in the May
1 edition of Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report.
John Brooks, leader of the CDC's HIV
Epidemiology Team, described efforts to determine the source of the Indiana
outbreak, trace patterns of transmission, halt further infections and bring
affected people into care. He also presented results from a molecular
epidemiology analysis of HIV and HCV strains, providing insight into how the
viruses spread.
Brooks said that a disease intervention specialist
first recognised that two people newly diagnosed with HIV had used the same
needles for drug injection; contact tracing soon identified eight more cases. Health officials interviewed
newly diagnosed individuals, asking about
their use of non-sterile needles, the people they injected with and their sexual
partners. People were given the opportunity to suggest any social contacts they
thought "might benefit from an HIV test" without naming them as sex
or drug use partners. All named individuals who could be located were offered
HIV, HCV, hepatitis B virus and syphilis testing.
"It is past time for the federal ban on funding
for syringe exchange to end," Steffanie Strathdee
Investigators identified nearly 500
individuals during contact tracing, 83% of whom were located, assessed for risk
and tested for HIV. As of 14 June, a total of 170 people were diagnosed with
HIV. After a rapid increase in mid-March and April, the outbreak
plateaued. "We could tell we were closing in on the epidemic when no
contacts named were new," Brooks said.
More than half (55%) of the newly
diagnosed individuals were men, all were non-Hispanic white and the median age
was 32 years. Among those who were diagnosed with HIV, about 40% reported sharing
needles as their only risk factor, 1% reported only sexual risk, another 40%
reported both sharing needles and sexual risk, and nearly 20% had unknown risk
factors, according to the study abstract.
Almost all newly diagnosed people (96%)
reported injection drug use. They described crushing, dissolving and heating
extended-release oxymorphone, and some used methamphetamine and heroin as well.
The reported daily number of injections ranged from 4 to 15, and the number of
injection partners ranged from 1 to 6 per injection event. Interview
participants reported that injection drug use in this community is often
multi-generational, and family and community members frequently inject together
and share syringes and other equipment. The Indiana outbreak reflects a recent
upsurge in non-urban injection drug use in the US which has led to increases in
acute HIV and HCV infection and overdose deaths.
Some features of this outbreak differ
from those of other outbreaks previously seen among people who inject drugs in the US,
according to Brooks. The newly diagnosed population was rural, all white, and
nearly evenly split between men and women. In contrast, prior outbreaks
have traditionally involved inner-city residents, often African-American or Latino,
with a 2-to-1 ratio of men to women. But other factors of the Indiana outbreak
were similar, including a high rate of poverty (19%), unemployment (9%), low
education level (21% without a high school diploma) and limited access to
insurance and health care.
Genetic analysis of HIV pol and HCV NS5B gene sequences
from plasma samples collected from residents of Scott County and surrounding
areas between October 2014 and April 2015 showed that HIV strains were closely
related, while HCV strains were more diverse. Usually this type of testing is
done retrospectively, Brooks noted, adding that he thought this was one of first
times real-time phylogenetic data had been used to inform response to an ongoing
outbreak, letting investigators know early on that it was geographically
isolated.
There was a single large cluster of related HIV-1
subtype B strains (comprising 55 of 57 tested samples), along with a second very
small cluster that Brooks said may represent pre-existing undiagnosed
infections. Avidity testing showed that more than 90% of the HIV infections were
recent. Phylogenetic trees for HCV were quite different; although three viral
clusters were apparent, the "vast majority" of HCV strains did not
fall into any of them. Among the 119 samples tested, the most common HCV
genotypes were 1a (n = 82) and 3a (n = 29). Almost all people (>95%)
diagnosed with HIV had HCV co-infection, while about one-third of samples from
people with HCV showed HIV co-infection. Brooks explained that this picture is
consistent with HIV newly arriving in a community with a high prevalence of
pre-existing HCV of many different types.