Treatment of opioid dependence is an important way to reduce the spread of HIV and other
infectious diseases, particularly in Ukraine since intravenous opioid use is the major way
these infections are being spread. This proposal will be done at the Kiev City Narcology
Hospital and the City AIDS Center with collaborators from the University of Alabama and the
University of Colorado. It will study the acceptability and impact of a 3-month course of
methadone maintenance on 50 persons with opioid dependence, 25 who are HIV+ and 25 HIV-. The
proposed work will build on a relationship that was established with the Ukrainian
Co-Principal Investigator, Sergiy Dvoryak, M.D., during his Humphrey Fellowship at Johns
Hopkins in 1999-2000 when he spent time with Dr. Woody and Metzger at the Penn Addiction and
Treatment and Research Center. It will also extend studies of pharmacologic treatment for
opioid dependence and risk reduction behavioral interventions that are being done by Drs.
Woody, Schumacher and Booth in Russia and Ukraine. Primary aims are to: measure the
acceptability and compliance with a 3-month course of methadone maintenance in HIV+ and HIV-
patients; measure the impact of a 3-month course of methadone in reducing opioid use in HIV+
and HIV- patients; measure the impact of a 3-month course of methadone on reducing HIV risk
behavior in HIV+_and HIV- patients. Secondary aims are to: assess the degree to which a
3-month course of methadone maintenance reduces illegal activities and improves employment
and psychiatric symptoms; determine short-term outcome after completion of methadone
treatment; and obtain pilot data on the prevalence of hepatitis B and C among study patients.
This study will provide pilot data on the acceptability and efficacy of a short-term course
of methadone maintenance on HIV+ and HIV- persons in a setting where this treatment has not
been evaluated, on the feasibility of conducting the kind of work that is proposed, and will
enhance research capabilities of Kiev investigators for future HIV prevention and treatment
studies.