2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03118.x
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Hepatitis C virus among non-injecting cocaine users (NICUs) in South America: can injectors be a bridge?

Abstract: Non-injecting cocaine users from South America are vulnerable to multiple infections and HCV infection appears to occur through the sharing of straws. HCV infection is associated with intimate relationships with IDUs or HIV-seropositive partners, supporting the hypothesis that HCV risk may be due primarily to risk-taking behaviour associated with drugs in this population.

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Cited by 28 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Elevation of liver transaminases is the most likely explanation as to why this testing was ordered and high rates of prostate cancer in men without hepatitis C antibody present suggest there may be a relationship between the risk factors for hepatitis C exposure and prostate cancer pathogenesis. Hepatitis C has been linked to direct exposure to infected blood through transfusions [8], intravenous drug abuse [9], tattooing [10], sexual exposure [11] and inhalational cocaine use, through the sharing of nasal straws [12]. In men with evidence of hepatitis C antibody the approximate 70% rate of prostate cancer raises the question of hepatitis C as one potential causal mechanism for prostate cancer.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elevation of liver transaminases is the most likely explanation as to why this testing was ordered and high rates of prostate cancer in men without hepatitis C antibody present suggest there may be a relationship between the risk factors for hepatitis C exposure and prostate cancer pathogenesis. Hepatitis C has been linked to direct exposure to infected blood through transfusions [8], intravenous drug abuse [9], tattooing [10], sexual exposure [11] and inhalational cocaine use, through the sharing of nasal straws [12]. In men with evidence of hepatitis C antibody the approximate 70% rate of prostate cancer raises the question of hepatitis C as one potential causal mechanism for prostate cancer.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been estimated that around 0.4% of Uruguayan blood bank donors population is seropositive for HCV (DLSP, 2002) but it can increase up to 8.8% in non-injecting drug users (Caiaffa et al, 2011) and 10.1% in intravenous drug users (Osimani et al, 2005). There is no data published about the most prevalent HCV genotypes circulating in Uruguay and their evolutionary and demographic history.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The precise role of each one of these factors remains a challenge for epidemiologists and molecular biologists. The paper by Caiaffa et al provides consistent evidence about the role of shared straws in the spread of HCV among a pool of non-injecting drug users from Argentina and Uruguay, and also highlights the relevance of their interactions with injecting drug users and/or people living with HIV/AIDS, basically in the context of shared drug use [2].…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
“…the exposure of susceptible patients' blood to contaminated blood) is pivotal to the spread of hepatitis C and has been documented by a comprehensive literature in the field of epidemiology and molecular biology [2][3][4]8]. Notwithstanding, a substantial share of both chronic carriers and recently infected individuals have no history of parenteral exposure due either to blood transfusions (or organ transplants) or to the shared used of injection paraphernalia.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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