To explore the feasibility of opt in Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) screening and initiation of HCV treatment during incarceration in county jails including; 1. incarcerated persons positive for HCV who remain in jail for duration of 12 weeks of treatment and 2. incarcerated persons positive for HCV in jails less than the duration of 12 weeks of treatment who receive remaining supply of study drug on discharge with appropriate linkage to care. Assess quality of life measures in participants being treated for their HCV through the validated questionnaire EuroQol-5D at baseline and post-treatment.
Aligning with the World Health Organization (WHO) global guidance and recommendation to eliminate viral hepatitis by 2030 will require designated focus on priority populations who are disproportionately impacted by viral hepatitis. Addressing chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) with the justice involved population is crucial in reducing HCV within the greater population. Inmate populations bear a disproportionate share of the burden of HCV infection. HCV prevalence is 10-20 fold greater in the incarcerated population than the general population, although wider uptake among people who are incarcerated remains limited. Addressing HCV in the incarcerated population is a strategy to bring the US closer to successfully eradicating the HCV epidemic. Additionally, previous qualitative research has suggested that justice involved individuals felt incarceration is an apt time to initiate treatment and is a missed opportunity to not do so, and that waiting and initiating treatment upon release faces multiple challenges, including insurance or Medicaid enrollment, making appointments, transportation and work commitments. HCV in the jail setting is a public health issue that needs to be addressed. Extensive modelling has shown that HCV testing in people who are incarcerated prevents community spread of HCV and is cost effective. Furthermore, there is guidance and recommendations for HCV testing in the prison system where a vast majority of research is being conducted. However, there is limited guidance for HCV testing within jails. Thus, county jails are critical partners, and potentially may serve as an important setting for HCV screening, diagnosis and treatment, although data is scarce in this realm. We therefore aim to explore whether county jails are a practical and feasible setting for HCV screening, and initiating HCV treatment, including whether an incarcerated person resides in the county jail for the duration of treatment (group 1), or is released to the community in the midst of treatment with a supply of remaining study drug and linked to appropriate care (group 2).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Patients who qualify for the study will be provided with sofosbuvir/velpatasvir for chronic hepatitis C treatment.
Sustained Virologic Response
Undetectable hepatitis C RNA
Time frame: 12 weeks after treatment
Quality of life improvement
Improvement in quality of life measures after treatment of hepatitis C as measured by SF-12 tool
Time frame: At study enrollment and 12 weeks after treatment
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Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100