| Literature DB >> 30613166 |
Carlos Roncero1, Pablo Ryan2,3,4, Richard Littlewood5, Juan Macías6, Juan Ruiz7, Pedro Seijo8, Raúl Felipe Palma-Álvarez9,10,11, Pablo Vega12,13.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: People with a history of injecting drugs have high prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, and many have opioid use disorder (OUD). Modern HCV therapies with improved efficacy and tolerability are available, but access is often limited for this group, who may be underserved for health care and face social inequity. This work develops practical steps to improve HCV care in this population.Entities:
Keywords: HCV; elimination; opioid use disorder; practical recommendations; treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30613166 PMCID: PMC6307489 DOI: 10.2147/HMER.S187133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepat Med ISSN: 1179-1535
Figure 1Summary of the process for literature search.
Abbreviations: AASLD, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; BASL, British Association for the Study of the Liver; EASL, European Association for the Study of the Liver.
Summary of keywords used in literature search
| General terms related to HCV care and opioid use disorder (“hepatitis C management” OR “hepatitis C treatment” OR “HCV therapy” OR “Treatment of chronic HCV infection” OR “hepatitis C care” AND “People with a history of injecting drugs” OR “IDU” OR “PWID” OR “Opioid Use Disorder” OR “opioid dependence” OR “opioid addiction” OR “intravenous drugs” OR “intravenous substance” OR “Injecting drug” OR “injecting drug user” OR “heroin”). |
Abbreviation: HCV, hepatitis C virus; IDU, injecting drug users; PWID, people who inject drugs.
Summary of effective practical interventions in improving HCV care in patients with a history of injecting drugs and OUD
| Step | Country | Intervention | Key findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engagement | Portugal | Patient education program | A multidimensional education program including workshops, educational videos, leaflets, and HCP workshops improved patient knowledge and increased rate of patient referral to a liver specialist | |
| USA | Provision of a formal HCV education class reduced time to the initiation of HCV treatment, increased patient knowledge and interest in treatment, and improved patient–provider communication | |||
| USA | Interactive digital health decision aid | A tailored mobile electronic health decision aid developed to support methadone patients acceptable to people in treatment; viewed as useful for supporting engagement with HCPs | ||
| USA | HCP education program | Liver health training program for SUD clinic teams improved the implementation of recommended practices for HCV screening and referral | ||
| Netherlands | HCV public awareness campaign | A public HCV campaign including radio and newspaper ads and information material distributed at public places increased number of anti- HCV tests 1.36-fold in a 3-month period. Addition of a support program for primary care produced a further 2.2-fold increase in test frequency | ||
| Canada | Community “pop-up” clinic | 371 previously undiagnosed patients have been identified and 43% linked to multidisciplinary care with promising early results for those receiving treatment | ||
| UK | Negotiated flexibility in service provision approach | London health care providers adopted a “negotiated flexibility” approach to appointments, eligibility, substance use, and phlebotomy to facilitate the trust and engagement of PWID | ||
| Australia | Peer support service | Peer support service improved engagement, helped to build trusting relationships, and provided instrumental support for clients to access HCV treatment. Peer workers may also contribute to more effective deployment of health resources by preparing clients for clinical engagement with HCV health workers | ||
| Australia | Integrated peer support worker model | In an OST clinic with integrated peer support model, peer support workers facilitated broader discussion about HCV treatment, education, and support. This approach allows nurses to focus on assessment and treatment and may address some barriers to care | ||
| Screening | Scotland | Integrated DBST | DBST was effectively carried out at drug treatment and needle exchange services following appropriate training of staff. A total of 324 “hard to reach” patients tested HCV antibody positive within a 2-year period, 249 of whom attended for further follow-up | |
| UK | Community- based nurse-led DBST | Interim data showed high treatment uptake compared to hospital-based settings and suggested that HCV care can be effectively provided through a community-based model | ||
| France | DBST via out- reach mobile services | Hepatitis Mobile Team carried out 944 dry DBST for hard-to-reach patients. A total of 244 new patients identified by DBST screening, 49% achieved HCV cure | ||
| Egypt | Questionnaire- based HCV risk screening tool | The first level-screening tool assessed risk factors significantly associated with HCV infection. Integration of such a tool into primary care practice can promote early detection | ||
| UK | Community- based active case finding by peer facilitation | 379 homeless people were screened over a 1-year period. A total of 68 HCV-positive cases identified and offered referral to NHS Hepatology services | ||
| Scotland | Targeted screening at general practices | Test uptake and case yield were approximately 3 and 10 times higher in general practices where HCV testing was offered for IDU compared with control practices | ||
| USA | Targeted screening at drug treatment services | Implementation of a multifaceted screening program at an SUD clinic increased patient referral rates to specialist care | ||
| Work | Australia | APRI score | APRI score may be used as a simple noninvasive biomarker for cirrhosis with reasonable predictive accuracy | |
| Australia | TE | PWID viewed TE as a highly acceptable diagnostic method; 89% of patients who have undergone TE viewed it as preferable to liver biopsy or blood sample | ||
| UK | Community outreach service through addiction clinics | Portable Fibroscan was implemented as a part of an HCV outreach service in a community addiction clinics. Median time from referral to treatment initiation was 32 weeks | ||
| Canada | Patient survey | Survey of patient’s needs and preferences showed no single preferred approach for different aspects of care; a multipronged and flexible approach at all stages of the patient pathway is most likely to be successful | ||
| USA | Peer mentors | Patients receiving usual care with the addition of peer mentors had a significantly higher rate of HCV treatment initiation when compared to usual care alone | ||
| Portugal | HCP education program | A multidimensional health education program for patients and HCP at seven drug treatment centers significantly increased rates of patient referral to a liver specialist, from 56.2 to 67.5% | ||
| Treatment | USA | Integrated treatment in primary care | PCPs were trained to treat HCV through video conferencing, case-based learning, and mentoring. They were generally confident treating patients, and the majority will begin providing care independently after 1 year | |
| Switzerland | Integrated treatment at drug treatment services | Implementation of an onsite multidisciplinary HCV team and noninvasive fibrosis assessment at a drug treatment center increased HCV assessments and treatment uptake when compared with previous model of hospital referral | ||
| UK | 105 patients were recruited through needle exchange centers over 42 months; 89 patients received treatment in a needle exchange; 74 patients successfully achieved SVR | |||
| Spain | Integrated treatment in prisons | The highly successful JailFree-C program involved universal screening of inmates and integrated HCV treatment. A total of 821 inmates tested, 81 identified as viremic, and 64 received treatment. SVR rates were similar to those in community | ||
| USA | HCV treatment as a part of integrated OUD treatment plan | HCV care delivered under-one-roof as a part of an OAT program achieved high rates of SVR12 among 136 participants (93%) | ||
| USA | HCV care within an office-based OST clinic was successfully set up; 95% of patients achieved early viral response at 4 weeks and SVR was achieved by 100% of patients who completed treatment | |||
| UK | Predictive modeling and sensitivity analyses used to project future HCV population suggested that combining HCV antiviral treatment with OAT and needle equipment programs could have chronic HCV prevalence over 10 years | |||
| Ukraine | A community-involved model providing integrated HCV treatment and drug treatment services has successfully enrolled over 1,200 patients for HCV treatment, 546 achieved SVR 12 weeks posttreatment | |||
| USA | Addiction specialists based in HCV clinics | Embedding of addiction specialists in an HCV clinic to provide integration between methadone clinic and hepatitis clinic sites improved patient’s adherence with HCV care in comparison to standard referral practices | ||
| USA | Education program for PCP | Training program allowed 700 patients to be treated at clinics not previously authorized to provide care for HCV demonstrating the power in this approach to facilitate up-scaling of effective HCV treatment | ||
| Australia | DAA prescribing by PCP | Innovative teleconferencing approach allowed HCV care to be effectively provided by PCPs and may facilitate treatment in populations engaged with other treatment services | ||
| Australia | DAA prescribing in nurse-led drug treatment services | A nurse-led model of HCV care provision in OST clinics was implemented and has reviewed over 300 patients with viral hepatitis with therapy initiated in 40 patients and notable increase in GP referrals | ||
| Australia | Community hepatitis service | Community-based nurse-led hepatitis service produced reasonable rates of fibrosis staging (72%) and treatment initiation (20%) for PWID. A total of 70% of genotype 1 patients and 54% of genotype 3 patients achieved SVR | ||
| USA | DAA prescribing in primary care | Access to HCV treatment at a primary care clinic under the supervision of a hepatologist resulted in high screening rates and cure rates similar to those reported elsewhere | ||
| Australia | DAA prescribing in prisons | APRI score was used for patient evaluation and DAA therapy prescribed to relevant patients to provide successful care in a resource-limited prison setting | ||
| USA | DAA prescribing at pharmacist-led clinics | HCV treatment including DAA therapy provided through pharmacist- managed clinics recorded similar SVR rates to those achieved in primary care. Pharmacists can be used to help widen access to effective care for HCV | ||
| Switzerland | Digital platform for clinical decision making | Smartphone application for access to national treatment guidelines provided faster access to more detailed and specific information to facilitate clinical decision making when compared with traditional web-based publications | ||
| USA | Teleconsultation | Patients approved assessment by two-way video conferencing, and there have been high rates of medication adherence in the telemedicine-based HCV care program | ||
| Canada | Community HCV program with psychosocial support | A community-based highly supportive model (which included counseling, case management, peer workers, and other services) promoted high levels of treatment and adherence among marginalized groups | ||
| Denmark | Tailored treatment duration | 4-Week treatment regime with LDV/SOF/RBV ± PEG2 was highly effective in treating OST patients, with all but one patient in the per protocol population achieving SVR12 | ||
| Australia | Contingency management | Patients with injecting drug use were significantly more likely to complete an HBV vaccination series if they received a 30 AUD financial incentive per dose compared to those in the no incentive control condition | ||
| Canada | Enhanced long- term follow-up post-treatment | A multidisciplinary care program with enhanced long-term follow-up achieved high SVR rates and low rates of recurrent viremia following therapy | ||
| Greece | A model developed to simulate HCV transmission among PWID demonstrated the need for scaled-up harm reduction interventions to maintain reductions in HCV prevalence and prevent any resurgence |
Abbreviations: APRI, aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index; AUD, Australian dollars; DBST, dried blood spot testing; GP, general physician; HCPs, health care professionals; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; IDU, injecting drug users; LDV/SOF/RBV, Ledipasvir/Sofobuvir/Ribavirin; NHS, National Health System; OAT, opioid agonist therapy; OST, opioid substitution therapy; OUD, opioid use disorder; PCPs, primary care physicians; PWID, people who inject drugs; SVR, sustained virologic response; SUD, substance use disorder; TE, transient elastography.
Figure 2Practical recommendations for best practices of HCV treatment for people with OUD.
Note: A patient journey model, with steps of engagement, screening, workup/referral, and treatment, is used to structure practical recommendations.
Abbreviations: DAA, direct-acting antiviral; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HCP, health care professionals; PCP, primary care physician; OUD, opioid use disorder.