| Literature DB >> 29912944 |
Autumn Zuckerman1, Andrew Douglas2, Sam Nwosu3, Leena Choi3, Cody Chastain4.
Abstract
Barriers remain in the hepatitis C virus (HCV) cascade of care (CoC), limiting the overall impact of direct acting antivirals. This study examines movement between the stages of the HCV CoC and identifies reasons why patients and specific patient populations fail to advance through care in a real world population. We performed a single-center, ambispective cohort study of patients receiving care in an outpatient infectious diseases clinic between October 2015 and September 2016. Patients were followed from treatment referral through sustained virologic response. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify factors related to completion of each step of the CoC. Of 187 patients meeting inclusion criteria, 120 (64%) completed an evaluation for HCV treatment, 119 (64%) were prescribed treatment, 114 (61%) were approved for treatment, 113 (60%) initiated treatment, 107 (57%) completed treatment, and 100 (53%) achieved a sustained virologic response. In univariate and multivariate analyses, patients with Medicaid insurance were less likely to complete an evaluation and were less likely to be approved for treatment. Treatment completion and SVR rates are much improved from historical CoC reports. However, linkage to care following referral continues to be a formidable challenge for the HCV CoC in the DAA era. Ongoing efforts should focus on linkage to care to capitalize on DAA treatment advances and improving access for patients with Medicaid insurance.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29912944 PMCID: PMC6005558 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Cascade of care definitions.
| Cascade of Care | Required Element | Reason Required Element Not Met |
|---|---|---|
| Referred | Scheduled appointment in the Vanderbilt University Medical Center Infectious Diseases Clinic | Appointment cancelled or re-scheduled by the time of the originally scheduled appointment. |
| HCV Treatment Evaluation | Initial HCV evaluation by a prescribing provider | Patient did not attend appointment for evaluation of HCV infection by a prescribing provider |
| Staging and baseline labs completed | Necessary work-up for a prescribing treatment including fibrosis staging and baseline labs were not completed | |
| Prescribed Treatment | Completion of one of the following: | Drug interactions preventing prescription |
| Social barriers preventing treatment prescription | ||
| Other (e.g. patient refusal, etc.) | ||
| Treatment Approved | Completion of one of the following: | Ineligible or not approved through insurance or drug manufacturer PAP |
| Treatment Initiated | Fulfillment of a prescription and administration of at least one tablet of the prescribed medication | Patient lost to follow-up |
| Social barriers preventing treatment initiation | ||
| Other medical care priorities | ||
| Other (patient refusal, etc.) | ||
| Treatment Completed | Confirmed administration of the entire prescribed treatment course by patient self-report | Treatment discontinued |
| Unknown/lost to follow-up | ||
| Adverse effects prevented completion | ||
| Sustained Virologic Response | An undetectable HCV RNA at least 12 weeks after completing HCV treatment | Virologic failure |
| Patient lost to follow-up |
HCV: Hepatitis C Virus; PAP: Patient Assistance Program
Baseline characteristics of patients referred and completing an evaluation.
| Baseline Characteristics | N | Overall | Referred Evaluated |
|---|---|---|---|
| N = 187 | N = 120 | ||
| 187 | 38.5, 51.0, 57.0 (47.5 ± 12.9) | 34.0, 52.0, 57.0 (46.5 ± 14.4) | |
| 187 | 115 (61.5%) | 86 (71.7%) | |
| 186 | |||
| White/Caucasian | 132 (71.0%) | 82 (68.3%) | |
| African American | 48 (25.8%) | 34 (28.3%) | |
| Other | 6 (3.2%) | 4 (3.3%) | |
| 187 | |||
| Medicaid | 60 (32.1%) | 23 (19.2%) | |
| Medicare | 21 (11.2%) | 18 (15.0%) | |
| Medicare/Medicaid dual | 19 (10.2%) | 15 (12.5%) | |
| Private | 72 (38.5%) | 55 (45.8%) | |
| Other | 15 (8.0%) | 9 (7.5%) | |
| 125 | 29 (23.2%) | 28 (23.3%) | |
| 144 | |||
| 1a | 97 (67.4%) | 79 (65.8%) | |
| 1b | 19 (13.2%) | 18 (15.0%) | |
| 2 | 11 (7.6%) | 9 (7.5%) | |
| 3 | 15 (10.4%) | 12 (10.0%) | |
| 4 | 1 (0.7%) | 1 (0.8%) | |
| 6 | 1 (0.7%) | 1 (0.8%) | |
| 141 | 128 (90.8%) | 108 (90.0%) | |
| 149 | 59 (39.6%) | 52 (43.3%) | |
| 149 | 61 (40.9%) | 48 (40.0%) | |
| 143 | 17 (11.9%) | 10 (8.7%) | |
| 147 | 60 (40.8%) | 49 (41.2%) | |
| 145 | 27 (18.6%) | 16 (13.3%) | |
| 144 | 7 (4.9%) | 2 (1.7%) | |
| 147 | 81 (55.1%) | 62 (51.7%) |
aHIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus
bIDU: Injection drug use.
cPsychiatric Disorder defined as diagnosed ICD9/10 including F01-F69 and F80-F99
d>5 drinks on most days of the week
eIllicit Substance Use based on self-reported use.
N is the number of non-missing values.
For continuous variables a, b, c represent the lower quartile, a the median, and b the upper quartile c, with Mean and SD: ± 1 SD.
Categorical variables are summarized with the n and percentage: n (%).
Tests used: Wilcoxon test for continuous variables and Pearson test for categorical variables.
Clinical baseline demographics were unable to confirmed consistently for patients referred not-evaluated, and therefore are not listed or analyzed.
Fig 1Cascade of care and reasons for lack of progression.
Of 187 patients meeting inclusion criteria, 120 (64%) completed an evaluation for HCV treatment, 119 (64%) were prescribed treatment, 114 (61%) were approved for treatment, 113 (60%) initiated treatment, 107 (57%) completed treatment, and 100 (53%) achieved a SVR. The largest lack of progression was seen from a referral to an evaluation with 51 patients never attending a scheduled clinic appointment. After an evaluation was completed, the most common reason for lack of progression was losing a patient to follow-up, defined as ≥5 attempts to contact the patient were made by phone as well as a letter sent to the patient’s most recent address with no response over at least three months.
Characteristics associated with evaluation completion.
| Covariates | Evaluated | Not Evaluated | OR | 95% C.I. | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 86 (71.7%) | 38 (56.7%) | 3.13 | 1.50–6.55 | ||
| 23 (19.2%) | 37 (55%) | 0.21 | 0.10–0.45 | ||
| 52 (43.3%) | 7 (24%) | 1.46 | 0.57–3.72 | 0.426 | |
| 48 (40.0%) | 13 (44.8%) | 0.91 | 0.26–3.18 | 0.881 | |
| 16 (13.3%) | 11 (44.0%) | 0.41 | 0.14–1.21 | 0.106 |
HIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
aPsychiatric Disorder defined as diagnosed ICD9/10 including F01-F69 and F80-F99.
b Illicit Substance Use based on self-reported use or a positive value for illicit substances used on common drug screen.
cPercent of available data
Fig 2Time-to-approval analysis.
Insurance type was a significant predictor of the rate in days to approval of direct acting antiviral therapy. The rate in days to approval decreased by 73% in patients with Medicaid compared with non-Medicaid (HR = 0.27, 95% CI = 0.15 to 0.48, p<0.001), reflecting a longer time to treatment approval in this population.