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Implementing HCV Treatment for High-risk Populations in Austin, Texas

The University of Texas System (UT) logo

The University of Texas System (UT)

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Treatments

Behavioral: Simplified Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Treatment Protocol

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05460130
Study 1656
IN-US-987-6016 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Highly-effective, pan-genotypic direct acting antivirals (DAAs) have made elimination of hepatitis C virus (HCV) a real possibility. A minority of the population infected with HCV has access to care or been prescribed such HCV treatment. Among people experiencing homelessness in the US, and seeking care at Health Care for the Homeless (HCH) clinics, prevalence is 31%, and 70% among people who experience homeless and inject drugs. In N. America, 55% of people who inject drugs (PWID) have HCV. Austin, TX has over 7,000 people experiencing homelessness with about 20% having a substance use disorder.

Treatment of HCV via DAAs is feasible and effective in primary care settings, and is as effective as treatment by specialists. Among people with opioid use disorder receiving opioid agonist therapy it's both effective and cost-effective. Treatment in the primary care setting has also been shown to be feasible and effective for people experiencing homelessness, with supporting evidence of engaging and retaining people in care. Furthermore, a novel HCV treatment model, featuring a simplified HCV treatment algorithm for front-line health care providers (primary care physicians, Nurse Practitioners, Physicians Assistants), has now been published, to help increase capacity, scale-up treatment and achieve elimination.

This study takes the foregoing new simplified approach one step further: Implementing this simplified algorithm for front-line health care providers in primary care settings caring for high-risk populations such as individuals experiencing homelessness and PWID. The novelty is providing treatment in diverse primary care settings, and targeting clinical sites serving high-risk populations, including people experiencing homelessness and PWID. Investigators use an implementation science approach to study the feasibility and effectiveness of the HCV treatment model in achieving HCV cure in high-risk populations.

Investigators hypothesize that by training front-line health care providers on a simplified, low-barrier HCV treatment model and adapting it using a locally contextualized, protocol-driven approach, investigators will effectively scale up HCV treatment across multiple primary care clinical sites serving high-risk populations, yielding sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (SVR-12) in 75% of enrolled participants. Investigators predict theHCV treatment model to measure favorably across implementation process and outcome measures of reach, adoption, implementation, and maintenance.

Enrollment

64 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult patients age 18 years and older.
  • Enrolled in care at one of CommunityCare's clinical sites participating in the study.
  • Laboratory diagnosis of HCV
  • Chronic hepatitis C infection

Exclusion criteria

  • Have decompensated cirrhosis.
  • Have received hepatitis C treatment previously.
  • Had a liver transplant or actively on the transplant list awaiting a liver transplant.
  • Have resistant HCV virus
  • Infected with HIV
  • Infected with hepatitis B
  • Currently pregnant

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

64 participants in 1 patient group

Study Participants
Other group
Description:
Persons infected with the hepatitis C virus who meet the study inclusion criteria and do not meet one or more of the exclusion criteria.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Simplified Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Treatment Protocol

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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