Scientific Reports (Jan 2024)

Effect of integrated hepatitis C virus treatment on psychological distress in people with substance use disorders

  • Christer F. Aas,
  • Jørn Henrik Vold,
  • Fatemeh Chalabianloo,
  • Else-Marie Løberg,
  • Aaron G. Lim,
  • Peter Vickerman,
  • Kjell Arne Johansson,
  • Lars Thore Fadnes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-51336-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract People with substance use disorders (SUD) have a high prevalence of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and mental health disorders. We aimed to assess the impact of integrated HCV treatment on psychological distress measured by Hopkins-symptom-checklist-10 (SCL-10). This multi-center randomized controlled trial evaluated psychological distress as a secondary outcome of integrated HCV treatment (INTRO-HCV trial). From 2017 to 2019, 289 participants were randomly assigned to receive either integrated or standard HCV treatment with direct-acting antiviral therapy. Integrated HCV treatment was delivered in eight decentralized outpatient opioid agonist therapy clinics and two community care centers; standard treatment was delivered in internal medicine outpatient clinics at centralized hospitals. Participants in the integrated treatment arm had a sustained virologic response of 93% compared to 73% for those in standard treatment arm. Psychological distress was assessed using SCL-10 prior to initiation of HCV treatment and 12 weeks after treatment completion. The mean SCL-10 score prior to HCV treatment was 2.2 (standard deviation [SD]: 0.7) for patients receiving integrated HCV treatment and 2.2 (SD: 0.8) for those receiving standard HCV treatment. Twelve weeks after the end of treatment, the mean SCL-10 score change was − 0.1 (− 0.3;0.0) in the integrated compared to the standard arm. Psychological distress did not substantially change during the treatment period and was not significantly different between the treatment arms.