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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03513796
Other study ID # 2016CO01
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date June 20, 2018
Est. completion date February 16, 2020

Study information

Verified date March 2021
Source NHS Tayside
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

EVERYONES HCV is a retrospective review of all previous Hepatitis C (HCV) testing and diagnosis in NHS Tayside. The aim of this study is to analyse and compare the different Hepatitis C diagnostic pathways with a view to determining the most cost effective combination of methods of diagnosing HCV infection in a typical developed world population.


Description:

Hepatitis C is a blood-borne virus (HCV) that can seriously damage the liver and is spread mainly through blood-to-blood contact with an infected person. The "serious and significant public health risk" posed by HCV was recognised during a member's debate in the Scottish Parliament in 2004. By December 2006, Health Protection Scotland estimated that 50,000 persons in Scotland had been infected with the Hepatitis C virus and that 38,000 were chronic carriers. Currently, the greatest risk of acquiring the virus in the UK is through injecting drug use. In Scotland, it is estimated that over 85% of individuals who have Hepatitis C were infected in this way. Scotland has taken the lead within the UK in tackling HCV with its Hepatitis C Action Plan. One of the plan's key goals was to identify undiagnosed infections. The plan has identified that access to testing was a significant obstacle in diagnosis. Nearly 75% of undiagnosed cases of HCV within Scotland (16,300) are people who inject drugs (PWIDs) who no longer inject. Given that we have now entered the new era of the curative direct antiviral agents against HCV, it is important that we develop new stratagems to identify and treat those cases The investigators had considered population screening, however this is not justified under World Health Organisation (WHO) criteria due to the relatively low prevalence in Scotland. The way forward will be to prioritise strategies and target different population groups in a logical manner. The question is what is the most cost-effective means to achieve this and with what combination of testing strategies. Tayside has been at the forefront of piloting novel testing methods. The following list includes the current diagnostic pathways which are standard care in NHS Tayside and previously published pilot studies. 1. Standard diagnosis pathway: clinical suspicion at presentation in primary (pathway 1a) or secondary care (pathway 1b) that HCV could be the cause of the presentation or co-incident issue requiring testing 2. Patients on opiate substitution therapy (OST): testing is being done across the Tayside Substance Misuse Services on initial assessment and annually thereafter. 3. Patients on opiate substitution therapy (OST). Opportunistic testing done for clients receiving OST in participating dispensing pharmacies. 4. Testing in needle exchanges 5. Patients previously on OST or in drug treatment: review of methadone prescription records, dating back to the 1980s, to identify patients at increased risk of HCV 6. Prisons: opt-out testing upon entry is standard practice for all prisoners in the region 7. Community outreach to ethnic minorities, including testing in the mosques 8. General Practice: Electronic record trawl and health promotion 1. Record trawl with specially designed search tools to identify patients at increased risk of HCV infection and GP follow up offer of testing. 2. Health promotion message and easy access HCV testing for selected general practices in Tayside. 9. Targeted General Practice screening in Glasgow: 1. Targeting to GPs in areas with high social deprivation, as these are associated with higher HCV prevalence 2. Targeting to GPs with in areas with high social deprivation, with patients who have a history of IVDU and fall within the ages of 30-64 10. GP record unification. 24 general practices in Tayside unified their HCV testing records with the secondary care HCV records to identify patients never referred or lost to follow up. Whilst this is not a novel diagnosis pathway, the outcomes will provide important information regarding linkage to care for other pathways. The investigators intend to retrospectively compare and evaluate the existing and pilot studies that have been conducted in NHS Tayside along with two general practice based studies from Glasgow to determine the optimum and most cost effective bundle of diagnostic activities to bring the different HCV communities to diagnosis and accessing of treatment.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 1949
Est. completion date February 16, 2020
Est. primary completion date December 31, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers
Gender All
Age group 16 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - All individuals in NHS Tayside tested for Hepatitis C (HCV) between 1st January 1999 and 31st January 2018 Exclusion Criteria: - None

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
United Kingdom NHS Tayside Dundee

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
NHS Tayside

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United Kingdom, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of HCV tests processed in NHS Tayside between 1999 and 2017 Total number of HCV IgG and PCR tests processed by NHS Tayside Virology lab between 1999 and 2017 16 months
Secondary Number of HCV tests that are positive in NHS Tayside between 1999 and 2017 The number of positive HCV IgG and PCR blood tests processed by NHS Tayside between 1999 and 2017 16 months
Secondary Number of positive HCV tests by requesting source between 1999 and 2017 The number of positive HCV tests in NHS Tayside in each requesting healthcare environment. 16 months
Secondary Cost of HCV testing in each requesting healthcare environment. The cost of requesting, performing and processing a HCV IgG and PCR test for each healthcare environment. 16 months
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