Donna M Evon1, Carol E Golin2, Paul Stewart3, Michael W Fried4, Shani Alston4, Bryce Reeve5, Anna S Lok6, Richard K Sterling7, Joseph K Lim8, Nancy Reau9, Souvik Sarkar10, David R Nelson11, K R Reddy12, Adrian M Di Bisceglie13. 1. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of North Carolina, United States. Electronic address: Donna_evon@med.unc.edu. 2. Division of General Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, University of North Carolina, United States; Department of Health Behavior, University of North Carolina, United States. 3. Department of Biostatistics, University of North Carolina, United States. 4. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of North Carolina, United States. 5. Department of Health Policy and Management, University of North Carolina, United States. 6. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Michigan, United States. 7. Department of Internal Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, United States. 8. Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University, United States. 9. Department of Internal Medicine, Rush Medical College, United States. 10. Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis, United States. 11. Department of Medicine, University of Florida, United States. 12. Department of Medicine, the University of Pennsylvania, United States. 13. Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University, United States.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: New highly efficacious direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies are available to treat chronic hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection. Real-world, patient-centered data on harms and benefits associated with these therapies are needed. METHODS: PROP UP is a multi-center prospective observational study that plans to enroll 1600 patients starting treatment with recently-approved DAA regimens. Informed by extensive input from a HCV patient engagement group who prioritized outcomes most important to them, patient-reported outcomes will be characterized using surveys at five time points: Baseline (T1), treatment week 4 (T2), end of treatment (T3), 12weeks post-treatment (T4), 12months post-treatment (T5). OUTCOMES: (1) Changes in side effects, functioning, pre-existing conditions, and out-of-pocket costs during therapy (T1 vs T2/T3); (2) Medication adherence in relation to a history of mental health/substance abuse, treatment regimens, pill burden, reasons for missed doses, and cure rates; (3) Short term impact of cure on functioning and amelioration of symptoms (T1 vs T4); (4) Long-term treatment harms or benefits of cure on symptoms, side effects, pre-existing conditions, and functioning (T1 vs T5). Similarities between regimens will be examined where comparisons are appropriate and meaningful. CONCLUSION: PROP UP complements previous clinical trials by focusing on patient-reported outcomes in a representative sample of patients treated in clinical practice, by collaborating with a patient engagement group, by characterizing the experiences of vulnerable subgroups, and by investigating long-term harms and benefits of treatments. PROP UP is designed to provide novel and detailed information to support informed decision-making for patients and providers contemplating HCV treatment (PCORI CER-1408-20,660; NCT02601820).
BACKGROUND: New highly efficacious direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies are available to treat chronic hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection. Real-world, patient-centered data on harms and benefits associated with these therapies are needed. METHODS:PROP UP is a multi-center prospective observational study that plans to enroll 1600 patients starting treatment with recently-approved DAA regimens. Informed by extensive input from a HCVpatient engagement group who prioritized outcomes most important to them, patient-reported outcomes will be characterized using surveys at five time points: Baseline (T1), treatment week 4 (T2), end of treatment (T3), 12weeks post-treatment (T4), 12months post-treatment (T5). OUTCOMES: (1) Changes in side effects, functioning, pre-existing conditions, and out-of-pocket costs during therapy (T1 vs T2/T3); (2) Medication adherence in relation to a history of mental health/substance abuse, treatment regimens, pill burden, reasons for missed doses, and cure rates; (3) Short term impact of cure on functioning and amelioration of symptoms (T1 vs T4); (4) Long-term treatment harms or benefits of cure on symptoms, side effects, pre-existing conditions, and functioning (T1 vs T5). Similarities between regimens will be examined where comparisons are appropriate and meaningful. CONCLUSION:PROP UP complements previous clinical trials by focusing on patient-reported outcomes in a representative sample of patients treated in clinical practice, by collaborating with a patient engagement group, by characterizing the experiences of vulnerable subgroups, and by investigating long-term harms and benefits of treatments. PROP UP is designed to provide novel and detailed information to support informed decision-making for patients and providers contemplating HCV treatment (PCORI CER-1408-20,660; NCT02601820).
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Authors: D M Evon; J Amador; P Stewart; B B Reeve; A S Lok; R K Sterling; A M Di Bisceglie; N Reau; M Serper; S Sarkar; J K Lim; C E Golin; M W Fried Journal: Aliment Pharmacol Ther Date: 2018-01-29 Impact factor: 8.171
Authors: Marina Serper; Donna M Evon; Paul W Stewart; Anna S Lok; Jipcy Amador; Bryce B Reeve; Carol E Golin; Michael W Fried; K Rajender Reddy; Richard K Sterling; Souvik Sarkar; Adrian M Di Bisceglie; Joseph K Lim; David R Nelson; Nancy Reau Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2019-10-28 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Donna M Evon; Souvik Sarkar; Jipcy Amador; Anna S Lok; Richard K Sterling; Paul W Stewart; Bryce B Reeve; Marina Serper; Nancy Reau; K Rajender Reddy; Adrian M Di Bisceglie; David R Nelson; Carol E Golin; Joseph K Lim; Michael W Fried Journal: J Hepatol Date: 2019-05-13 Impact factor: 30.083
Authors: Donna M Evon; Paul W Stewart; Jipcy Amador; Marina Serper; Anna S Lok; Richard K Sterling; Souvik Sarkar; Carol E Golin; Bryce B Reeve; David R Nelson; Nancy Reau; Joseph K Lim; K Rajender Reddy; Adrian M Di Bisceglie; Michael W Fried Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-08-01 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Scott Kixmiller; Anquenette P Sloan; Summer Wadsworth; Finton Brown; Lourdes Chaney; Larry Houston; Kim Thomas Journal: Res Involv Engagem Date: 2021-01-25
Authors: Marina Serper; Donna M Evon; Jipcy Amador; Paul W Stewart; Souvik Sarkar; Anna S Lok; Richard K Sterling; Bryce B Reeve; Carol E Golin; K Rajender Reddy; Joseph K Lim; Nancy Reau; David R Nelson; Adrian M Di Bisceglie; Michael W Fried Journal: Liver Int Date: 2021-01-22 Impact factor: 5.828