Clinical and Molecular Hepatology (Jan 2021)

Scaling up the in-hospital hepatitis C virus care cascade in Taiwan

  • Chung-Feng Huang,
  • Pey-Fang Wu,
  • Ming-Lun Yeh,
  • Ching-I Huang,
  • Po-Cheng Liang,
  • Cheng-Ting Hsu,
  • Po-Yao Hsu,
  • Hung-Yin Liu,
  • Ying-Chou Huang,
  • Zu-Yau Lin,
  • Shinn-Cherng Chen,
  • Jee-Fu Huang,
  • Chia-Yen Dai,
  • Wan-Long Chuang,
  • Ming-Lung Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3350/cmh.2020.0150
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
pp. 136 – 143

Abstract

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Background/Aims Obstacles exist in facilitating hepatitis C virus (HCV) care cascade. To increase timely and accurate diagnosis, disease awareness and accessibility, in-hospital HCV reflex testing followed by automatic appointments and a late call-back strategy (R.N.A. model) was applied. We aimed to compare the HCV treatment rate of patients treated with this strategy compared to those without. Methods One hundred and twenty-five anti-HCV seropositive patients who adopted the R.N.A. model in 2020 and another 1,396 controls treated in 2019 were enrolled to compare the gaps in accurate HCV RNA diagnosis to final treatment allocation. Results The HCV RNA testing rate was significantly higher in patients who received reflex testing than in those without reflex testing (100% vs. 84.8%, P<0.001). When patients were stratified according to the referring outpatient department, a significant improvement in the HCV RNA testing rate was particularly noted in patients from non-hepatology departments (100% vs. 23.3%, P<0.001). The treatment rate in HCV RNA seropositive patients was 83% (83/100) after the adoption of the R.N.A. model, among whom 96.1% and 73.9% of patients were from the hepatology and non-hepatology departments, respectively. Compared to subjects without R.N.A. model application, a significant improvement in the treatment rate was observed for patients from non-hepatology departments (73.9% vs. 27.8%, P=0.001). The application of the R.N.A. model significantly increased the in-hospital HCV treatment uptake from 6.4% to 73.9% for patients from non-hepatology departments (P<0.001). Conclusions The care cascade increased the treatment uptake and set up a model for enhancing in-hospital HCV elimination.

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