Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05248555 |
Other study ID # |
VHCRP2104 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
December 2026 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2024 |
Source |
Kirby Institute |
Contact |
David Silk, BSc |
Phone |
+61293850900 |
Email |
dsilk[@]kirby.unsw.edu.au |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The National Australian HCV Point-of-Care Testing Program will establish an observational
cohort to evaluate whether scale-up of finger-stick point-of-care HCV testing increases
diagnosis and treatment for HCV infection. Participants will be recruited from settings
providing services to people with a risk factor for the acquisition of HCV infection
(including drug treatment clinics, needle and syringe programs, homelessness settings, mental
health services, prisons, and mobile outreach). All participants who undergo HCV
point-of-care testing at the study site will be included in the data collection. Participants
will not receive treatment as a part of this study. Participants who are HCV RNA positive
will be linked to standard of care.
Description:
The advent of simple direct-acting antiviral hepatitis C (HCV) therapies with cure rates >95%
is one of the greatest medical advances in decades, having led to a reversal in liver-related
mortality. In Australia, treatment uptake has declined between 2016 (32,000 treated) and
2019/20 (2019: 11,500; 2020: 8,500).1 Progress towards HCV elimination has been impeded by
COVID-19, affecting the delivery of national and state-based HCV strategies. Improving HCV
treatment uptake to reduce disease burden is a key aim of global, national and state-based
HCV strategies.2-4
Scale-up of HCV testing and treatment will be required to achieve elimination by 2030.
Current diagnostic pathways require multiple visits to a practitioner reducing the proportion
who receive a diagnosis. In Australia, 81% of people have had HCV antibody testing (indicates
exposure), but only 47% have been HCV RNA tested (indicates active infection and the need for
HCV treatment).5 Mathematical modelling suggests that HCV RNA testing needs to increase by at
least 50% annually to achieve elimination in Australia by 2030.6
The Kirby Institute is an international leader in research evaluating the Xpert HCV assay
(Grebely Lancet Gastro Hep 2017), having built a large network of Xpert platforms for HCV
testing in needle and syringe programs, prisons, drug treatment clinics, tertiary hospitals,
and Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Service. In Kirby-led research, point-of-care HCV
testing interventions in needle and syringe programs and prisons have resulted in high HCV
treatment uptake (70-90%). The Kirby Institute and Flinders University also have a strong
track record of implementing point-of-care testing for STIs and COVID-19, providing an ideal
foundation to scale-up Xpert HCV testing in Australia.
The Kirby Institute and Flinders University will establish the Australian National HCV
Point-of-care Testing Program for the scale-up of point-of-care HCV RNA testing in services
with high prevalence of HCV infection, including community health centres, drug treatment
clinics, needle and syringe programs, and prisons. This program will include the development
of standard operating procedures, logistics/deployment, initial set-up, an operator training
program, and quality assurance and competency assessment program.
An observational cohort study will be established to evaluate HCV treatment uptake following
scale-up of point-of-care HCV testing among people with a risk factor for acquisition of HCV
infection or people attending a service caring for people with risk factors for the
acquisition of HCV infection.
Participants will be recruited from settings that provide services to people with a risk
factor for the acquisition of HCV infection. All participants who undergo point-of-care HCV
testing at the study site will be included in the data collection. Participants will not
receive treatment as a part of this study. Participants who are HCV RNA positive will be
linked to standard of care for any other clinical assessments and treatment initiation.