MedPath

Transforming the Cascade Of Hepatitis C Care

Completed
Conditions
Hepatitis C, Chronic
Registration Number
NCT03226509
Lead Sponsor
University of Pittsburgh
Brief Summary

Several factors are barriers to effective Hepatitis C care: 1) The majority of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)-positive patients (45-85 percent) are unaware that they are infected; 2) Only a small minority of those in need of treatment receive it; 3) Members of minorities and older patients are even less likely to receive needed care; and 4) Until recently, even those who were treated had a low chance of clearing the virus or achieving cure; 5) It is possible that older attitudes and expectation of futility might continue to persist among patients and provider in primary care settings.

Community Health Centers are often the most culturally appropriate and accessible choices, particularly for underserved populations, with the benefit of ongoing trust and relationships with patients. Therefore, these can be ideal places to deliver complex HCV care if they possess the needed expertise. However, most community-based primary care and community health centers lack access to Hepatitis C evaluation and treatment services, leading to a major public health problem.

Thus, investigators propose to implement and evaluate a pragmatic trial to implement and evaluate a multi-disciplinary model for HCV treatment at Currently, the treatment initiation rates at each of these sites is estimated as less than 10%. The investigators hypothesize that our project will increase the rate of participation in all the steps of the HCV care cascade and ultimately lead to more than doubled rates of treatment uptake

Detailed Description

Primary Objective:

Determine uptake, effectiveness and safety of IFN-free, DAAs among "real world" patients, including those with multiple comorbidities, in the primary care setting.

Secondary Objective(s):

1. Demonstrate the transformation of the cascade of Hepatitis C Care at 3 primary care clinics in terms of changes from baseline in rates for rates of access to HCV care including HCV screening, evaluation, treatment consideration, treatment uptake, completion, loss to follow-up, and treatment success rate.

2. Advance understanding of hepatitis C related decision-making in the era of Interferon (IFN)-free Direct acting agents (DAAs) by examining the context, needs, motivators, barriers, and preferences among patients and providers to the delivery of hepatitis C treatment at primary care clinics

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
325
Inclusion Criteria
  • All patients with detectable HCV RNA level, currently receiving care at any of these three community health centers
Exclusion Criteria
  • Criteria for automatic specialty referral (exclusion from treatment at community health centers) Child Turcotte Pugh Class B or C Any history of decompensated liver disease or hepatocellular carcinoma Evidence of renal disease (GFR <50) or coexisting autoimmune condition HIV of hepatitis B co-infection

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Percentage of patients achieving sustained viral response 12 weeks post treatment (SVR 12) over a three year intervention period.three years

measure percentage of patients moving through the cascade of care to cure of condition (SVR 12)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of patients lost to follow upthree years

Percent of consented patients with a positive HCV viral load who are lost to follow up

Hepatitis C capacity building among family medicine physicians (provider practice and perceived confidence):three years

Endpoints related to HCV capacity building among family medicine physicians: Evaluate comfort and skill among family physicians to evaluate and treat HCV infection as measured on a qualitative survey of physicians

Rate of treatment considerationthree years

Percentage of consented patients with a positive HCV viral load who have a clinical evaluation and assessment of psychosocial readiness for treatment documented in the medical record

Rates of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) screeningthree years

Percentage of at risk patients in the practice who have a completed HCV antibody test

Rate of treatment uptakethree years

Percentage of patients recommended for treatment who begin medical treatment

Rate of treatment completionthree years

Percentage of patients that began treatment who complete the recommended course of therapy

Rate of Chronic Hepatitis C evaluationthree years

Percentage of patients with a positive HCV antibody test who have a HCV polymerase chain reaction (PCR) viral load completed

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UPMC Shadyside Family Health Center

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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