Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a blood-borne virus that damages the liver and is a major public health threat globally. Most individuals infected with HCV are unaware of it and show no symptoms until presenting with incurable, fatal end-stage disease. In Scotland and Australia approximately 0.7% of the general population has chronic HCV with 0.4% in Wales, and they are at risk of developing cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The clinical challenge is to identify those infected and bring them into treatment before the disease advances. The greatest risk factor for acquiring HCV in many countries is through injecting drug use. On the road to recovery from drug use, many will receive long-term opiate substitution therapy (OST), commonly with methadone or buprenorphine. Internationally, OST is routinely dispensed by a community pharmacist. HCV testing can be offered by GPs, drugs workers, drug agencies, social workers, community pharmacies and needle exchange sites. Once patients are diagnosed, they are referred to a hospital-based service to receive anti-HCV treatment. In this pathway, less than 10% of the OST population is tested per year, and cumulative rates of testing are less than 50% of those on OST. Highly effective Directly Acting Antiviral (DAA) treatment combinations are now available and achieve HCV cure rates in excess of 95%, with once or twice daily tablets for 8-24 weeks. The REACH HCV study will compare efficacy of an education-only HCV referral and treatment pathway against a nurse-led point-of-care device testing and treatment pathway among OST patients in community pharmacies in Scotland, Wales and Australia. Eligible participants will be treated using DAAs.
The REACH HCV study is an international, cluster-randomised non-clinical trial with two arms. The unit of randomisation is the community pharmacy, so all participants in a given pharmacy are allocated to one of two pathways for HCV testing and treatment. There are three participating hubs located in: Scotland, Wales and Australia respectively. The sample size is 140 participants, equally split between the three participating hubs, and the trial population is patients receiving opiate substitution therapy (OST) in community pharmacies. Arm 1 (REACH arm): The community pharmacist will take the opportunity to explain the risks of contracting HCV from current or historical intravenous drug use. The OST patients will then meet with an outreach hepatology nurse specialist who will consent the patients and perform a diagnostic point-of-care (PoC) HCV test along with venepuncture for safety laboratory blood tests and confirmatory HCV RNA. The outreach nurse will return for a subsequent visit to prescribe (in the UK; in Australia prescribing is undertaken by qualified medic) and deliver HCV medication for those patients who test positive, which will be dispensed to participants alongside their OST schedule by their community pharmacist. The outreach nurse will return after approximately 14 days to confirm negative results, dispense medication for new patients with positive results (PCR positive but below limit of detection of POC test) and confirm follow up appointments where required. The RNA and PoC test will also be administered for sustained viral response at 12 weeks post treatment (SVR12). Arm 2 (Education-only arm): The community pharmacist will discuss the risks of contracting HCV through current or historical intravenous drug use. The community pharmacist will then advise participants on the nearest centre for HCV testing and treatment, as is standard of care for the countries included in this study. If they are referred from a REACH pharmacy, they will present a reply slip and/or the Patient Information Sheet to the nurse who will then consent the participant, perform HCV and safety blood tests, and complete the study paperwork. The participant's medication will be delivered to, and dispensed from, their community pharmacy alongside their OST. Participants will return to the local BBV clinic for an SVR12 test after completing treatment. All eligible HCV-infected participants will receive treatment with 100mg glecaprevir/40mg pibrentasvir (Maviret) a pan-genotypic Direct Acting Antiviral (DAA) for between 8-16 weeks, depending on blood test results. The study is planned to run for a total of two years, with one year clinical phase and one year follow-up phase.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
210
Trial of outreach nurse offering point-of-care Hepatitis C (HCV) testing to opiate substitution therapy patients in community pharmacies, which is hypothesised to improve number of patients tested and cured of HCV.
Trial of community pharmacists advising opiate substitution therapy patients to attend a local blood-borne virus clinic to be tested for Hepatitis C by a specialist nurse, which represents the standard care pathway for HCV patients in the countries included in the study.
The Burnet Institute
Melbourne, Australia
NHS Tayside
Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom
Public Health Wales
Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom
SVR12
Proportion of patients in a population of stable opiate substitution therapy patients achieving Sustained Viral Response at 12 weeks post-treatment in the REACH pathway versus education-only pathway (Intention to Treat analysis).
Time frame: 12 weeks after participants finish their hepatitis C treatment regimen
Determine whether the REACH pathway compared with the education only pathway leads to more people on opiate substitution therapy who are confirmed HCV RNA positive being treated and cured.
Percentage of patients achieving Sustained Viral Response at 12 weeks post-treatment from the patient population that tested positive for HCV in each arm (modified Intention to Treat analysis).
Time frame: 12 weeks after participants finish their hepatitis C treatment regimen
Cost-effectiveness analysis of the REACH pathway versus the education-only pathway, from the perspective of the NHS (UK) and Medicare (Australia).
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio to consider the epidemiological impact of scaling up the intervention to all pharmacies in a specific setting in Australia, Scotland and Wales; and cost-benefit calculations (e.g. cost per HCV diagnosis; cost per SVR12; cost per HCV infection averted; number needed to screen).
Time frame: 2 years
Determine whether the REACH pathway compared with the education-only pathway leads to more people on opiate substitution therapy being tested for HCV.
Proportion of patients being tested for HCV in each arm
Time frame: 2 years
Compare adherence and persistence to HCV therapy in the Reach pathway to the education-only pathway.
Proportion of patients adhering to therapy in each arm (taking ≥ 85% of prescribed tablets) as reported in the observed therapy adherence log.
Time frame: 2 years
Assess the impact of baseline blood tests on treatment decisions.
Proportion of patients in whom changes in therapy are advised due to blood test results, as recorded at start of HCV therapy.
Time frame: 2 years
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