Affiliation:
1. School of Health and Life Sciences Glasgow Caledonian University Glasgow G4 0BA UK
2. Public Health Scotland Meridian Court Glasgow G2 6QE UK
3. University of Bristol Bristol BS8 1TL UK
4. University of Dundee Dundee UK
5. West of Scotland Specialist Virology Centre Glasgow Royal Infirmary Glasgow UK
6. Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School University of Bristol Bristol BS8 1TL UK
Abstract
AbstractBackground and AimsChronic infection with the hepatitis C virus (HCV) has a detrimental impact on health‐related quality of life (QoL). Scale‐up of HCV direct‐acting antiviral (DAA) therapy among people who inject drugs (PWID) is underway in several countries since the introduction of interferon‐free regimens. This study aimed to assess the impact of DAA treatment success on QoL for PWID.DesignCross‐sectional study using two rounds of the Needle Exchange Surveillance Initiative, a national anonymous bio‐behavioural survey and a longitudinal study involving PWID who underwent DAA therapy.SettingThe setting for the cross‐sectional study was Scotland (2017–2018, 2019–2020). The setting for the longitudinal study was the Tayside region of Scotland (2019–2021).ParticipantsIn the cross‐sectional study PWID were recruited from services providing injecting equipment (n = 4009). In the longitudinal study, participants were PWID on DAA therapy (n = 83).MeasurementsIn the cross‐sectional study, the association between QoL (measured using the EQ‐5D‐5L quality of life instrument) and HCV diagnosis and treatment was assessed using multilevel linear regression. In the longitudinal study, QoL was compared at four timepoints using multilevel regression, from treatment commencement until 12 months following commencement.FindingsIn the cross‐sectional study, 41% (n = 1618) were ever chronically HCV infected, of whom 78% (n = 1262) were aware of their status and of whom 64% (n = 704) had undergone DAA therapy. There was no evidence for a marked QoL improvement associated with viral clearance among those treated for HCV (B = 0.03; 95% CI, −0.03 to 0.09). In the longitudinal study, improved QoL was observed at the sustained virologic response test timepoint (B = 0.18; 95% CI, 0.10–0.27), but this was not maintained at 12 months following start of treatment (B = 0.02; 95% CI, −0.05 to 0.10).ConclusionsSuccessful direct‐acting antiviral therapy for hepatitis C infection may not lead to a durable improvement in quality of life among people who inject drugs, although there may be a transient improvement around the time of sustained virologic response. Economic models of the impact of scaling‐up treatment may need to include more conservative quality of life benefits over and above reductions in mortality, disease progression and transmission of infection.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
2 articles.
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