Tools Needed to Support Same-day Diagnosis and Treatment of Current Hepatitis C Infection

Author:

Fricker Gregory P1ORCID,Ghany Marc G2,Mera Jorge34,Pinsky Benjamin A56,Ward John W7,Chung Raymond T18

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

2. Liver Diseases Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health , Bethesda, Maryland , USA

3. Cherokee Nation Health Services , Tahlequah, Oklahoma

4. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of New Mexico - Health Science Center , NM , USA

5. Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA , USA

6. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA   USA

7. Coalition for Global Hepatitis Elimination, Task Force for Global Health , Atlanta, GA , USA

8. Hepatology and Liver Center, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

Abstract

Abstract Current HCV prevention efforts and treatment rates must improve for the United States (U.S.) to achieve WHO global elimination targets by 2030[1]. The current multi-day diagnosis and treatment paradigm for hepatitis C (HCV) infection leads to significant loss in the cascade of care, resulting in far fewer patients receiving treatment with direct acting antiviral agents (DAAs) than those diagnosed with HCV infection [2,3]. To achieve HCV elimination, a paradigm shift in access to HCV treatment is needed from current multi-day testing and treatment algorithms to same day diagnosis and treatment. This shift will require new tools, such as FDA-approved, CLIA-waived point-of-care (POC) antigen or nucleic acid tests (NAT) for HCV and HBV and NAT for HIV that do not require venous blood. Such a shift will also require better utilization of existing resources, expanding access to HCV treatment through availability of onsite treatment, removal of payer barriers to approval, adoption of minimal monitoring approaches during treatment, expanded access to available POC tests, and available specialist referral networks for patients who fail initial therapy, have advanced liver fibrosis, or have co-incident HIV or HBV infection. A same-day diagnosis and treatment paradigm will substantially contribute to HCV elimination by improving treatment rates for those diagnosed with HCV infection and expanding access to treatment in settings where patients have brief encounters with healthcare.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

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