Drug Abuse, Intravenous Clinical Trial
Official title:
Case Management in Hepatitis C Virus Infected People Who Inject Drugs in Belgium
To study the impact of case management on the outcome of the care of chronic hepatitis C in people who inject drugs (PWID). By creating the function of case manager, the investigators will target all the barriers to care of the HCV care continuum. Partial objectives are to measure the impact of case management on the uptake for screening, the uptake and outcome of treatment, and the rate of reinfection.
Hepatitis C virus infection (HCV) is nowadays one of the leading causes of chronic liver
disease, with prevalence of liver cirrhosis still increasing. The hepatitis C virus (HCV) is
primarily transmitted through blood-to-blood contact. In the Western world, overall
prevalence of HCV antibodies is low. In Belgium, prevalence of HCV in the general population
is estimated around 1% by expert opinion. However, in high-risk populations prevalence of HCV
increases. Data for HCV antibody prevalence in Belgium show rates of 60-80% in people who
inject drugs (PWID). Populations at increased risk of HCV infection include:
- PWID
- recipients of infected blood products or invasive procedures in health-care facilities
with inadequate infection control practices (western world: before 1992)
- children born to mothers infected with HCV
- people with sexual partners who are HCV-infected
- people with HIV infection
- prisoners or previously incarcerated persons
- people who have used intranasal drugs
- people who have had tattoos or piercings
Based on international guidelines, the Belgian Association for the Study of the Liver (BASL)
recommends targeted screening for these populations to assess HCV prevalence. This is not yet
executed in Belgium, despite the severe health and economic burden accompanied with chronic
hepatitis C virus infection (CHC). In response to this lacuna in the Belgium health care, the
"Hepatitis C Plan (2014-2019)" was developed. This action plan aims to improve the following
goals:
- Uptake for screening in high-risk populations
- Creation of a national systematic screening procedure
- Development of an HCV expertise network to improve care and linkage-to-care Furthermore,
in April of 2015 the federal government of Belgium distributed a pact with the
pharmaceutical industry, called "The Future Pact". This pact between industry and
government focuses on accessibility to care, specifically for high-risk groups. Goals
are to create a national registry for therapy and develop patient support programs, next
to the expansion of reimbursement of therapy for HCV infection in fibrosis stadium II.
However, despite the international guidelines and despite the strategic aims in the
Hepatitis C plan and the Future Pact, no specific actions are described, and screening
is not systematically executed in high-risk groups in Belgium.
The importance of this screening cannot be underestimated as HCV is now curable, with success
rates of 60-100% according to other associated factors (e.g. use of direct acting antivirals
(DAAs), severity of liver disease, HCV genotype, resistance). Furthermore, different studies
state that treatment of patients with CHC in an early stage has the potential to be
cost-effective, as hospitalization costs after development of liver disease far exceed the
cost of antiviral therapy. Nonetheless, treatment uptake also remains low.
One of the reasons why PWIDs were excluded from treatment in the past was stigmatization
based on greater risk of reinfection. Latest studies show low rates of reinfection among
PWID, even with continued injection drug use during and after treatment. The pooled HCV
reinfection risk was 2.4 per 100 person years, combined for six studies, across the UK,
Australia, the Netherlands and Greece, suggesting that HCV treatment should not be withheld
due to concerns about reinfection alone. However, with ongoing risk behaviour, current
guidelines recommend monitoring with annual HCV RNA assessments. Furthermore, data from the
National Scottish Hepatitis C Clinical Database show that an increasing significant minority
of PWID continue to inject post-SVR at an intensity which leads to either hospitalisation or
death and increased risk of reinfection. Thus, harm reduction and counselling remain
necessary.
With this trial, the investigators want to evaluate a possible approach to reach the
different goals defined in the Hepatitis C plan and the future pact. The investigators will
study the impact of case management on the outcome of care for HCV infected PWID in Belgium.
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