Individual and Poly-Substance use and Condomless Sex Among HIV-Uninfected Adults Reporting Heterosexual Sex in a Multi-Site Cohort

preprint OA: closed
View at publisher

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND: We analyzed the association between substance use (SU) and condomless sex (CS) among HIV-negative adults reporting heterosexual sex in the Seek, Test, Treat, and Retain (STTR) consortium. We describe the impact of SU as well as person/partner and context-related factors on CS, identifying combinations of factors that indicate the highest likelihood of CS.METHODS: We analyzed data from four US-based STTR studies to examine the effect of SU on CS using two SU exposures: 1) current SU (within 3 months) and 2) SU before/during sex. Adjusted individual-study, multivariable relative risk regression was used to examine the relationship between CS and SU. We also examined interactions with type of sex and partner HIV status. Pooled effect estimates were calculated using traditional fixed-effects meta-analysis.RESULTS: We analyzed data for current SU (n=6781; 82% men, median age=33 years) and SU before/during sex (n=2915; 69% men, median age=40 years). For both exposure classifications, any SU other than cannabis increased the likelihood of CS relative to non-SU (8-16%, p-values<0.001). In the current SU group, however, polysubstance use did not increase the likelihood of CS compared to single-substance use. Cannabis use did not increase the likelihood of CS, regardless of frequency of use. Type of sex was associated with CS; those reporting vaginal and anal sex had a higher likelihood of CS compared to vaginal sex only for both exposure classifications (18-21%, p<0.001). Current SU increased likelihood of CS among those reporting vaginal sex only (9-10%, p<0.001); results were similar for those reporting vaginal and anal sex (5-8%, p <0.01). SU before/during sex increased the likelihood of CS among those reporting vaginal sex only (20%; p<0.001) and among those reporting vaginal and anal sex (7%; p=0.002). Single- and poly-SU before/during sex increased the likelihood of CS for those with exclusively HIV-negative partners (7-8%, p£0.02), and for those reporting HIV-negative and HIV-status unknown partners (9-13%, p£0.03).CONCLUSION: Except for cannabis, any SU increased the likelihood of CS. CS was associated with having perceived HIV-negative partners and with having had both anal/vaginal sex.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. The paper's references may be in our DB but unresolved to ``paper_id`` (resolution happens at ingest when the cited DOI matches a row we already have). Run the cross-source citation reconcile pass to retry.

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00