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The investigators propose to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing treatment as usual (TaU) for HCV screening (rapid anti-HCV screening and referral) to a intervention screening that includes TaU plus a rapid point-of-care HCV RNA test in persons experiencing homelessness. The primary outcome of interest is linkage-to-care. Linkage to care is defined as evaluation by a health care provider for HCV infection within 30 days of baseline screening and referral. We will compare the proportion of patients who are evaluated by a provider within the 30 day window in each study arm: (1) participants who screened positive with rapid anti-HCV and are referred for evaluation) and (2) Rapid HCV RNA plus TaU (those who tested positive with both rapid anti-HCV and confirmatory RNA and are also referred to a provider.) Secondarily, the investigators will also assess HCV RNA levels in both groups twelve weeks after treatment ends (24 to 36 weeks after anti-HCV screening) to determine the percent of individuals who achieved sustained virologic response (SVR12), which is a marker for cure.
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The study's primary is to to assess linkage to care, which is the percent of subjects who are evaluated by a provider specifically for HCV infection in both groups. Linkage to care will be determined via medical chart abstraction 30 days after testing. The investigators hypothesize that there will be a 30% absolute difference in linkage to care between study arms, with a higher percent of participants in the combined rapid testing group being linked to a provider for evaluation relative to the control group (rapid anti-HCV alone).
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31 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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