@article{71edb6fca74f4a6dae55af6fee63907b,
title = "Transitions in latent classes of sexual risk behavior among young injection drug users following HIV prevention intervention",
abstract = "We analyzed data from a large randomized HIV/HCV prevention intervention trial with young injection drug users (IDUs). Using categorical latent variable analysis, we identified distinct classes of sexual behavior for men and women. We conducted a latent transition analysis to test the effect of the intervention on transitions from higher to lower risk classes. Men who were in a high-risk class at baseline who received the intervention were 86 % more likely to be in a low-risk class at follow-up compared to those in the control group (p = 0.025). High-risk intervention participants were significantly more likely to transition to the class characterized by unprotected sex with a main partner only, while low-risk intervention participants were significantly less likely to transition to that class. No intervention effect was detected on the sexual risk behavior of women, or of men who at baseline were having unprotected sex with a main partner only.",
keywords = "HIV, Injection drug use, Latent class analysis, Prevention, Sexual risk behavior",
author = "Mackesy-Amiti, {Mary Ellen} and Ouellet, {Lawrence J.} and Lorna Finnegan and Holly Hagan and Elizabeth Golub and Mary Latka and Karla Wagner and Garfein, {Richard S.}",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgments This study was supported by a Grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, R01 DA031584. The CIDUS-3/ DUIT intervention trial was supported by a cooperative agreement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U64/ CCU317662, U64/CCU517656, U64/CCU917655, U64/CCU217659, U64/CCU017615; Institutional Review Board no. CDC-NCHSTP-2934. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the National Institute on Drug Abuse or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The DUIT Study Group includes the following people: Steffanie Strathdee, Elizabeth Golub, Marie Bailey-Kloch and Karen Yen-Hobelman (Baltimore); Lawrence Ouellet, Susan Bailey and Joyce Fitzgerald (Chicago); Sharon Hudson, Peter Kerndt and Karla Wagner (Los Angeles); Mary Latka, David Vlahov and Farzana Kapadia (New York); Holly Hagan, Hanne Thiede, Nadine Snyder and Jennifer V. Campbell (Seattle); and Richard Garfein, David Purcell, Ian Williams, Paige Ingram and Andrea Swartzendruber (CDC). We thank Dr. Katie Witkiewitz for her expert assistance with the analysis.",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s10461-013-0601-2",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "18",
pages = "464--472",
journal = "AIDS and Behavior",
issn = "1090-7165",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "3",
}