Hepatitis C Clinical Trial
— HCVPCL05/20Official title:
Randomized Open-label and Non-inferiority Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety, Adherence, and Cost-effectiveness of Simplified and Decentralized Hepatitis C Treatment in Primary Health Care Compared to Standard-of-care in the Brazilian Public Health System
Up to 650,000 people in Brazil are living with chronic hepatitis c virus (HCV) infection. Hepatitis C is a silent disease, and up to 20% of cases can progress to liver cirrhosis and its complications. Rapid tests for diagnosis of HCV infection and non-invasive methods for detecting liver cirrhosis are available in the Brazilian Public Health System. Additionally, safe and highly effective drugs (direct-acting antivirals, DAAs) have been delivered for free for hepatitis C treatment by the Brazilian Unified Health System (Sistema Único de Saúde, SUS) since 2015. Sustained virological response (SVR) rates with DAAs in studies conducted in Brazil and Latin America were higher than 90%. Despite the availability of rapid tests for early diagnosis and effective drugs, the HCV continuum of care remains deficient in Brazil. It is estimated that only 10% of individuals known to have hepatitis C achieve HCV cure (SVR). This is explained by multiple barriers from diagnosis to treatment access, such as low rates of population screening (HCVST are not available in Brazil) and few available slots in tertiary centers for hepatitis C treatment by specialists. International studies have described that SVR rates by simplified hepatitis C treatment performed by non-specialists in the Primary Care System were similar to those treated in tertiary centers by specialists (standard-of-care). However, the optimal strategy for managing hepatitis C within the Brazilian-SUS remains unclear.This project aims to evaluate the improve of the HCV continuum of care by a implementation of a test-and-treat strategy in the Primary Care System in Brazil. The project consists of two parallel studies (and a sub-study). The project consists of two parallel studies (and a sub-study). Study I is a population-based cross-sectional screening study using rapid tests to determine the prevalence of HCV infection in people attending a Basic Health Care Unit. The sub-study associated with Study I is a cross-sectional study to assess the usability of a self-test for the detection of HCV antibodies in oral fluid (participants included in Study I). Study II is a phase IV open-label randomized clinical trial to evaluate the non-inferiority of simplified and decentralized hepatitis C treatment ("Simplified-and-Decentralized (SD) HCV treatment"; experimental arm) compared to specialist reference treatment ("Standard-of-Care (SC) HCV treatment"; control arm) within the SUS.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 30000 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 79 Years |
Eligibility | Study I and Sub-Study Inclusion Criteria: - Age between 18-79 years-old Exclusion Criteria: - Presence of a disease that need urgent/emergency treatment and/or acute febrile illness, such as COVID-19, Dengue, Zyca virus infection or Chikungunya - Lack of capacity to sign the informed consent or refuse to participate Study II Inclusion Criteria: - Age between 18 and 79 years old. - Presence of active/chronic hepatitis C, defined by a positive HCVab test and detectable HCV-RNA Exclusion Criteria: - Children and adolescents (< 18 years old) - Pregnancy, defined by a positive ß-HCG urinary test - Lactating individuals - Co-infection with HBV or HIV - Regular use of medications with potential drug interactions or contraindication for co-administration with SOF/VEL - Presence of severe acute illness, active neoplasia, solid organ transplant, or use of immunosuppressive medications - Presence of clinical signs of decompensated liver cirrhosis (ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, report of a recent episode of gastrointestinal bleeding within the last 12 weeks) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Brazil | Evandro Chagas National Institute of Infectious Diseases | Rio de Janeiro | Rio De Janeiro/RJ |
Brazil | Hugo Perazzo | Rio De Janeiro |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation | Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico |
Brazil,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Participant´s Ability to use the test | Assess the ability to perform the oral fluid HCV self-test | 1 month | |
Other | Participant preference for types of tests | The participant's information will be collected in the questionnaire, which will contain data on their preference between the two types of tests HCV self-testing using oral fluid and the conventional rapid test (fingerstick blood sample performed by a healthcare professional) . | 1 month | |
Other | Participant understanding to interpret his result | By comparing the results of the tests carried out by the participant and the health professional, it will be identified whether the participant performed the correct reading. | 1 month | |
Other | Test Performance | By comparing the results of the tests carried out by the participant and the health professional, it will be identified whether the participant performed the test correctly. | 1 month | |
Other | Test Accuracy | Comparison of the results of the self-test for HCV in oral fluid (self-testing and performed by a healthcare professional) compared to the conventional rapid test, whether they have the same precision of results. . | 1 month | |
Primary | Prevalence of HCV infection | The primary outcome of Study I will be the assessment of the prevalence of HCV infection in users of the Felippe Cardoso Family Clinic, Zilda Arns Family Clinic, and/or Klebel de Oliveira Rocha Family Clinic, located in the municipality of Rio de Janeiro. | 1 month | |
Primary | The effectiveness of the HCV treatment with test results. | The primary outcome of Study II will be the effectiveness of the HCV treatment in both arms, translated by sustained virological response (SVR12), characterized by undetectable HCV-RNA by the PCR method at least 12 weeks after the end of treatment with SOF/VEL. Comparison of test results at the beginning and end of treatment | 1 month | |
Primary | Usability of the result of a self-test HCV | Evaluate the interpretability of the result of a self-test for the detection of HCV antibodies (HCVab) in oral fluid in a subset of participants included in Study I (adults performing HCV testing). Comparison of the results of the tests carried out by the participant with those of the professional. | 1 month | |
Secondary | Proportion between positive and negative | Proportion of individuals with positive HCV anti-body (HCVab) test and undetectable HCV-RNA (spontaneous HCV clearance or false negative HCV ab test) | 1 month | |
Secondary | Participants with fibrosis/cirrhosis | Prevalence of advanced liver fibrosis/cirrhosis (hepatic elastography = 9.5 kPa) in people with chronic hepatitis C (reactive HCVab test & detectable HCV-RNA). | 1 month | |
Secondary | Participants who denied the treatment | Proportion of patients who refuse treatment for chronic hepatitis C. | 1 month | |
Secondary | cost per detected participant | Cost per case detected with HCV infection | 1 month | |
Secondary | Unscheduled visits during treatment | Rate of unplanned clinical visits during HCV treatment (from Day 0 to Week 12) | 3 months | |
Secondary | Improvement of liver fibrosis stage | Change in liver fibrosis stage, measured by hepatic elastography between the entry study assessment (Day 0) and the end-of-study assessment (Week 36 ± 12) among participants with SVR. | 1 year | |
Secondary | Quality of life data | Quality of life (health-related utility) before and after HCV cure (SVR). | 1 month | |
Secondary | Cost of treatment for participant | Cost per case who achieved SVR | 1 month | |
Secondary | Adherence to treatment | Adherence to SOF/VEL treatment measured by attendance at scheduled visits and reported by participants | 1 month |
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