Care Facilitation Advances Movement Along the Hepatitis C Care Continuum for Persons With Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Hepatitis C, and Substance Use: A Randomized Clinical Trial (CTN-0064)
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Direct-acting antivirals can cure hepatitis C virus (HCV). Persons with HCV/HIV and living with substance use are disadvantaged in benefiting from advances in HCV treatment.
Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, participants with HCV/HIV were randomized between February 2016 and January 2017 to either care facilitation or control. Twelve-month follow-up assessments were completed in January 2018.Care facilitation group participants received motivation and strengths-based case management addressing retrieval of HCV viral load results, engagement in HCV/HIV care, and medication adherence. Control group participants received referral to HCV evaluation and an offer of assistance in making care appointments. Primary outcome was number of steps achieved along a series of 8 clinical steps (eg, receiving HCV results, initiating treatment, sustained virologic response [SVR]) of the HCV/HIV care continuum over 12 months postrandomization.
Results: Three hundred eighty-one individuals were screened and 113 randomized. Median age was 51 years; 58.4% of participants were male and 72.6% were Black/African American. Median HIV-1 viral load was 27 209 copies/mL, with 69% having a detectable viral load. Mean number of steps completed was statistically significantly higher in the intervention group vs controls (2.44 vs 1.68 steps; χ [1] = 7.36, = .0067). Men in the intervention group completed a statistically significantly higher number of steps than controls. Eleven participants achieved SVR with no difference by treatment group.
Conclusions: The care facilitation intervention increased progress along the HCV/HIV care continuum, as observed for men and not women. Study findings also highlight continued challenges to achieve individual-patient SVR and population-level HCV elimination.
Clinical Trials Registration: NCT02641158.
Tan M, Kuncio D, Addish E, Nassau T, Higgins D, Miller M Open Forum Infect Dis. 2025; 12(2):ofaf043.
PMID: 39935962 PMC: 11811900. DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf043.
Schmidt R, Horigian V, Duan R, Traynor S, Davis C, Gonzalez S AIDS Behav. 2024; 28(11):3748-3757.
PMID: 39093354 PMC: 11471706. DOI: 10.1007/s10461-024-04410-2.
Disengagement from Care Among People Co-Infected with HIV and HCV: A Scoping Review.
Dinh D, Tan Y, Saeed S AIDS Behav. 2024; 28(10):3381-3403.
PMID: 38992228 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-024-04436-6.
Schmidt R, Horigian V, Shmueli-Blumberg D, Hefner K, Feinberg J, Kondapaka R Front Public Health. 2023; 11:1150062.
PMID: 37261240 PMC: 10228506. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1150062.
Wegener M, Brooks R, Speers S, Nichols L, Villanueva M Public Health Rep. 2023; 139(2):208-217.
PMID: 37232422 PMC: 10851907. DOI: 10.1177/00333549231172173.