Table 4.
Added intervention | First author(s) (or study name) and country | Study design | Intervention description | Number of patients in intervention | Key findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
HIV screening | Edelman 2013 USA [56] |
Randomized trial | People with OUD already receiving buprenorphine/naloxone randomized to HIV testing with brief sexual risk management (2 sessions) or enhanced sexual risk management (4 sessions) in a primary care clinic | 15 brief sexual risk management; 15 enhanced sexual risk management | Compared with brief sexual risk management, enhanced sexual risk management did not lead to differences in process (retention in OUD treatment) or clinical outcomes (health-related quality of life, sexual risk) |
HIV care | Altice 2003 USA [16] |
Cohort | PLWH with OUD offered HIV medication management in a syringe exchange van | 13 | From before intervention to 12-months after:
|
OUD care | Springer 2010 USA [69] |
Cohort | PLWH with OUD were offered medications for OUD following release from prison out of a group already engaging in directly-observed medications for HIV | 30 | Compared with baseline, participants:
|
Springer 2012 USA [70] |
Cohort | PLWH with OUD offered medications or OUD after prison release out of a group already receiving directly-observed medications for HIV | 50 | Retention on buprenorphine/naloxone for 24 months correlated with maximum viral suppression, while the receipt of directly-observed medications for HIV or methadone did not. | |
HIV care and OUD care | Hung 2016 Vietnam [57] |
Cohort | PLWH with OUD offered HIV testing, HIV treatment, and methadone maintenance at outpatient clinics | 7,395 | In sites that integrated methadone, HIV testing, and HIV treatment:
|