Release Date: Feb. 28, 2005
YOUTH WITH HIV
TAKE MORE RISKS AFTER NEW MEDS INTRODUCED
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Teens with HIV are having
more risky sex with more partners than their counterparts did in the years
before powerful new medications for HIV were introduced in 1996, according
to a new report in the American Journal of Health Behavior.
A group of HIV-positive youth studied between 1999 and 2000 reported having
more sexual partners, more unprotected sex and more drug use than HIV-positive
youth studied between 1994 and 1996, say Marguerita Lightfoot, Ph.D. and colleagues
at the UCLA AIDS Institute at the David Geffen School of Medicine.
Highly active antiretroviral therapies, or HAART, were introduced in 1996.
The new drugs have successfully lowered virus levels and prolonged the lives
of thousands of HIV patients.
Although the new study does not
prove that the introduction of HAART is the cause of increased risky behavior, “these findings indicate the need
for continued attention to the issue of sexual risk and the impact of HAART,” Lightfoot
says.
The new study also suggests the lives of some HIV-positive teens have not
improved with HAART. Lightfoot and colleagues found that the post-HAART group
was in worse health, more likely to have been sexually abused and to be clinically
distressed than the pre-HAART group.
“Targeted interventions for youth living with HIV that address risk
behaviors and aim to improve quality of life are more needed now than ever
before,” the researchers write.
Although HAART use has significantly improved the care of HIV patients, the
longer lives of those patients could mean more opportunities to transmit the
virus to others, says Lightfoot.
“Simultaneously, evidence suggests that many people living with HIV
believe that sexual behaviors that could lead to the transmission of HIV, like
unprotected sex, are less risky” if viral levels are low, she adds.
Although some studies suggest a shift toward risky behavior in adults in the
post-HAART era, (see http://www.cfah.org/hbns/newsrelease/safe_sex11-01-01.cfm),
Lightfoot and colleagues are among the first to examine whether HIV-positive
youth are taking more risks as well.
To find out, they compared behaviors between 349 teens with HIV in Los Angeles,
San Francisco, New York and Miami between 1994 and 1996 with 175 teens with
HIV in the same cities between 1999 and 2000. Although the two groups did not
include the same people, the groups were very similar in terms of sex, age,
race and ethnicity and other socioeconomic characteristics.
The 1999-2000 post-HAART group was almost twice as likely as the pre-HAART
group to have had unprotected sex in the last three months. On average, post-HAART
youth had nearly double the sexual partners as pre-HAART youth. Post-HAART
youth were also more likely to have had a sexual partner who used injection
drugs.
The post-HAART group also knew their HIV diagnosis at a younger age and were
in worse health than the pre-HAART group, the researchers found.
“Given the availability of HAART, it is surprising that the post-HAART
youth experienced more symptoms. This suggests that although they are being
identified as HIV-positive at a younger age, these youth are being identified
later in the progression of the disease. Therefore, it is also likely that
they were infected at a younger age,” Lightfoot says.
In the 1999-2000 group, only 53 percent of the teens were on HAART drug therapy.
Lightfoot says it’s “unclear” why more teens are not taking
HAART. “It may be that physicians are reluctant to prescribe antiretroviral
medications to certain subpopulations of youth, such as substance-using youth,
because they fear the youth will not adhere to the treatment regimen.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one-quarter of
the 40,000 new HIV infections in the United States each year occur in people
under age 21.
The Lightfoot study was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
FOR
MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829
or www.hbns.org.
Center for
the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
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