| Literature DB >> 24245959 |
Julie Hepworth1, Tanya Bain, Mieke van Driel.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Access to hepatitis C (hereafter HCV) antiviral therapy has commonly excluded populations with mental health and substance use disorders because they were considered as having contraindications to treatment, particularly due to the neuropsychiatric effects of interferon that can occur in some patients. In this review we examined access to HCV interferon antiviral therapy by populations with mental health and substance use problems to identify the evidence and reasons for exclusion.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24245959 PMCID: PMC3842744 DOI: 10.1186/1475-9276-12-92
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Summary of the phases in meta-narrative review (adapted from Greenhalgh et al. 2005)
| 1 | Planning phase: assemble multidisciplinary team, establish regular meetings. | → Established multidisciplinary team. |
| → Held regular team meetings. | ||
| 2 | Search phase: initial search led by intuition, search for seminal papers, search for empirical papers. | → Systematic search of major electronic databases. |
| → Searched for seminal papers. | ||
| 3 | Mapping phase: identify key elements of research traditions, main findings. | → Identified key approaches to the problem of access to HCV antiviral therapy. |
| → Identified inconsistencies across approaches. | ||
| 4 | Appraisal phase: evaluation of each paper for relevance to the review question, extract key results, group comparable results; | → Evaluated each paper for relevance to the research question, extracted key results and categorized comparable areas. |
| 5 | Synthesis phase: identify all key dimensions of the problem, give a narrative account of each contribution, treat conflicting findings as higher order data and explain; | → Described each area with reference to included articles. |
| → Critically discussed the areas and inconsistencies across the articles. | ||
| 6 | Recommendations phase: summarise overall messages from the research literature, distil and discuss recommendations for practice, policy and further research. | → Summarised and distilled key messages from the literature. |
| → Made recommendations for developing clinical guidelines and health service policy. |
Key narratives in research on HCV, mental health and antiviral therapy
| Preparation for HCV antiviral | Bonner et al. [ | Review of clinical experience | This paper sought to highlight critical pre-treatment strategies and provide tangible resources for HCV clinicians to facilitate preparation and successful treatment of these patients. | HCV clinicians (gastroenterologists/hepatologists) are in a unique position to prepare patients with co-existing MH and/or SA issues for antiviral therapy. Safely treat these populations with multidisciplinary care. Specialist, hospital clinicfocus. |
| | Hong et al. [ | Clinical case study | Case presentation of a 50 year-old man with HCV and an extensive history involving alcoholism,depression, and suicidiality who participated in a psycho-education group to help prepare him for treatment with pegylated alpha/ribavirin interferon therapy. | Psycho-education groups show promise to prepare patients for intensive medical treatment. The challenge is to help patients overcome barriers to treatment, particularly psycho-social problems, because available treatments are increasingly effective. |
| | Rifai et al. [ | Literature Review (1972-2009) | Review summary of the psychiatric implications of HCV infection and strategies for the management of interferon alfa-induced neuropsychiatric adverse effects. | Interferon can be safely administered to patients with psychiatric disorders provided there is comprehensive pre-treatment assessment, a risk-benefit analysis, and intensive ongoing medical and psychiatric follow-up. |
| | Sylvestre & Zweben [ | Descriptive report | Report of a peer-based HCV model to address barriers to treatment intervention. | Peer-based model was successful at engaging, educating, and treating drug users and can facilitate their successful screening and treatment |
| | Knott et al. [ | Evaluation study | Evaluation of the effect of integrating psychiatric and medical care on evaluation for and initiation of antiviral treatment. | An integrated MH and medical approach was associated with rates of antiviral therapy recommendation and initiation similar to patients without risk for psychiatric or substance use problems. |
| Adherence/completion antiviral therapy | Norman et al. [ | Research article | Description of an evaluation of a peer-based integrated model of care. | A high level of patient acceptability by patients using the service. |
| | Dollarhide et al. [ | Retrospective chart review | To evaluate the impact of common psychiatric disorders on treatment completion of antiviral therapy prescribed to a series of hepatitis C (virus) positive US veterans. | Prior psychiatric or substance use history did not predict completion of recommended IFN/ribavirin treatment. Findings. suggest a larger pool of veterans with psychiatric or substance use disorders may be considered for antiviral therapy when provided with multidisciplinary support. |
| Clinical outcomes | Schaefer et al. [ | Meeting report/EU Consensus statement | Summary of current knowledge of HCV infection, antiviral treatment and mental health. | The experience of the last 10 years has clearly shown that patients with psychiatric co-morbidity should not necessarily be excluded from IFN-a-based antiviral therapy. |
| | Freedman & Nathanson [ | Literature review (2003-2007) | Review of evidence-based best clinical practice of HCV with IFN-based therapy in patients with severe mental illness (SMI) and substance use disorders (SUDs). | clinical outcomes comparable with those without these comorbidities. |
| | Schaefer et al. [ | Prospective study | Investigated and compared the results of treating the chronic hepatitis C (HCV) infection of different groups of psychiatric-risk patients and controls with pegylated interferon alpha plusribavirin. | Psychiatric diseases and/or drug addiction did not negatively influence psychiatric tolerability of and antiviral response rate to HCV treatment with pegylated interferon alpha plus ribavirin. |
| | Mistler [ | Clinical case report | Report on three patients with hepatitis C infection, severe mental illness, and substance use disorders. | Patients were successfully treated for hepatitis C (cleared the virus) with carefully monitoring and psychiatric oversight. |
| | Sylvestre et al. [ | Conference report | Summarises current management issues. | Selected substance users can be candidates for HCV treatment even in the setting of psychiatric disease and relapse to drug use. |
| Loftis & Hauser [ | Review | Examines co-management models of care for HCV patients with psychiatric and substance use. | Many patients with comorbid use diagnoses can be treated safely and effectivelypsychiatric and substance with co-management strategies. |
Figure 1Literature searching strategy.