Out-of-Hospital Treatment of Hepatitis C Increases Retention in Care among People Who Inject Drugs and Homeless Persons: An Observational Study

Author:

Granozzi Bianca,Guardigni Viola,Badia Lorenzo,Rosselli Del Turco Elena,Zuppiroli Alberto,Tazza Beatrice,Malosso Pietro,Pieralli Stefano,Viale Pierluigi,Verucchi GabriellaORCID

Abstract

Background. People who inject drugs (PWID) and homeless people represent now a large reservoir of Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. However, Hepatis C elimination programs can barely reach these subgroups of patients. We aimed to evaluate and compare the retention in care among these difficult-to-treat patients when managed for HCV in hospital or in an out-of-hospital setting. Methods. In our retrospective study, we categorized the included patients (PWID and homeless persons) into two groups according to whether anti-HCV treatment was offered and provided in a hospital or an out-of-hospital setting. We run logistic regressions to evaluate factors associated with retention in care (defined as the completion of direct antiviral agents (DAAs) therapy). Results. We included 56 patients in our study: 27 were in the out-of-hospital group. Overall, 33 patients completed DAAs therapy. A higher rate of retention in care was observed in the out-of-hospital group rather than in-hospital group (p = 0.001). At the univariate analysis, retention in care was associated with the out-of-hospital management (p = 0.002) and with a shorter time between the first visit and the scheduled start of DAAs (p = 0.003). Conclusions. The choice of treatment models that can better adapt to difficult-to-treat populations, such as an out-of-hospital approach, will be important for achieving the eradication of HCV infection.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference29 articles.

1. Global Hepatitis Report 2017: Web Annex B: WHO Estimates of the Prevalence and Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection by WHO Region, 2015https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/277005/WHO-CDS-HIV-18.46-eng.pdf

2. Global Report on Access to Hepatitis C Treatment—Focus on Overcoming Barriershttp://www.who.int/Hepatitis/publications/hep-c-access-report/en/

3. WHO Websitehttps://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/hepatitis-c

4. CDC Recommendations for Hepatitis C Screening Among Adults — United States, 2020

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