Abstract

BackgroundAssociation between substance use and HIV-risk among gay and bisexual men (GBM) is well documented. However, their substance use patterns are diverse, and it is unknown whether self-reported use patterns are stable over time. MethodsSexually-active GBM, aged >16 years, were recruited in Metro Vancouver using respondent-driven sampling and followed across 5 study visits at six-month intervals (n = 449). To identify distinct patterns of substance use and their longitudinal stability, Latent Transition Analysis (LTA) was conducted for drugs reported by at least 30 participants. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) quantified the stability of class assignments. ResultsSix classes characterizing ‘limited drug use’ (i.e., low use of all drugs, except alcohol), ‘conventional drug use’ (i.e., use of alcohol, marijuana, and tobacco), ‘club drug use’ (i.e., use of alcohol, cocaine, and psychedelics), ‘sex drug use’ (i.e., use of alcohol, crystal meth, GHB, poppers, and erectile dysfunction drugs), ‘street drug use’ (i.e., use of alcohol and street opioids) and ‘assorted drug use’ (i.e., use of most drugs) were identified. Across five visits (2.5 years), 26.3% (n = 118/449) of GBM transitioned between classes. The prevalence of limited use trended upwards (Baseline:24.5%, Visit 5:28.3%, p < 0.0001) and assorted use trended downwards (13.4%–9.6%, p = 0.001). All classes had strong longitudinal stability (ICC > 0.97). ConclusionThe stability of latent substance use patterns highlight the utility of these measures in identifying patterns of substance use among people who use drugs – potentially allowing for better assessment of these groups and interventions related to their health.

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