A missing perspective: injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs.
Katie B BielloAlberto Edeza BsP SalhaneyD L BiancarelliMatthew J MimiagaM L DrainoniE S ChildsAngela Robertson BazziPublished in: AIDS care (2019)
The efficacy of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention has been established among people who inject drugs (PWID). HIV uninfected, at risk PWID, could likely benefit from long-acting injectable formulations of PrEP ("LAI-PrEP"); however, its acceptability in this population has not been previously documented. Thirty-three HIV-uninfected PWID in the U.S. Northeast completed an in-depth interview regarding perceived acceptability of LAI-PrEP. Coded data were synthesized using deductive thematic analysis. The majority of PWID interviewed believed LAI-PrEP would be acceptable. Participants perceived that receiving injections every two months would reduce barriers to daily oral PrEP adherence, including forgetting while "high" and safeguarding pills when homeless. A few participants expressed concerns regarding LAI-PrEP, including medical mistrust, a concern that injections could alter their "high" or be "triggering" for PWID. LAI-PrEP has the potential to reduce HIV among PWID; however, their perspectives are largely absent from research examining its efficacy, representing a missed opportunity.