Aims-To understand the epidemiology and transmission patterns of hepatitis C virus (HCV), the predominant blood borne-pathogen infecting drug injectors (IDUs), in a part of the former Soviet Union.Design-Cross-sectional respondent driven sample of IDUs. Measurements-Participants were surveyed to collect demographic, medical, and both general and dyad specific drug injection and sexual behaviors. A blood sample was collected to detect antibodies to hepatitis C and to amplify viral RNA for molecular analysis. The molecular data, including genotypes, were analyzed spatially and linkage patterns were compared to the social linkages obtained by respondent driven sampling (RDS) for chains of respondents and among the injection dyads.
Setting-St. Petersburg, RF
Participants-387Findings-HCV infection was all but ubiquitous: 94.6% of IDUs were HCV-seropositive. Among the 208 viral sequences amplified, genotype 3a predominated (n=119, 56.9%) followed by 1b (n=61, 29.2%), and 1a (n=25, 11.9%). There was no significant clustering of genotypes spatially. Neither genotypes nor closely related sequences were clustered within RDS chains. Analysis of HCV sequences from dyads failed to find associations of genotype or sequence homology within pairs.Conclusions-Genotyping reveals that there have been at least five unique introductions of HCV genotypes into the IDU community in St. Petersburg. Analysis of prevalent infections does not appear to correlate with the social networks of IDUs, suggesting that simple approaches to link these networks to prevalent infections, rather than incident transmission, will not prove meaningful. On a more positive note, the majority of IDUs are infected with 3a genotype that is associated with sustained virologic response to antiviral therapy.