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Care Navigation Increases Initiation of Hepatitis C Treatment After Release From Prison in a Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial: The C-LINK Study

Timothy Papaluca, Anne Craigie, L McDonald, Amy Edwards, Rebecca Winter, Annabelle Hoang, Alex A. Pappas, Aoife Waldron, Kelsey M. McCoy, Mark Stoové, Joseph Doyle, Margaret Hellard, Jacinta A. Holmes, Michael MacIsaac, Paul Desmond, David Iser, Alexander Thompson

2022Open Forum Infectious Diseases23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Background Prison-based hepatitis C treatment is safe and effective; however, many individuals are released untreated due to time or resource constraints. On community re-entry, individuals face a number of immediate competing priorities, and in this context, linkage to hepatitis C care is low. Interventions targeted at improving healthcare continuity after prison release have yielded positive outcomes for other health diagnoses; however, data regarding hepatitis C transitional care are limited. Methods We conducted a prospective randomized controlled trial comparing a hepatitis C care navigator intervention with standard of care for individuals released from prison with untreated hepatitis C infection. The primary outcome was prescription of hepatitis C direct-acting antivirals (DAA) within 6 months of release. Results Forty-six participants were randomized. The median age was 36 years and 59% were male. Ninety percent (n = 36 of 40) had injected drugs within 6 months before incarceration. Twenty-two were randomized to care navigation and 24 were randomized to standard of care. Individuals randomized to the intervention were more likely to commence hepatitis C DAAs within 6 months of release (73%, n = 16 of 22 vs 33% n = 8 of 24, P < .01), and the median time between re-entry and DAA prescription was significantly shorter (21 days [interquartile range {IQR}, 11–42] vs 82 days [IQR, 44–99], P = .049). Conclusions Care navigation increased hepatitis C treatment uptake among untreated individuals released from prison. Public policy should support similar models of care to promote treatment in this high-risk population. Such an approach will help achieve hepatitis C elimination as a public health threat.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInterquartile rangeRandomized controlled trialContext (archaeology)PrisonHepatitis CMedical prescriptionPopulationPsychological interventionInternal medicineHepatitisPsychiatryEnvironmental healthPharmacologyHistoryBiologyArchaeologyPaleontologyHepatitis C virus researchHepatitis B Virus StudiesDiabetes Management and Education
Care Navigation Increases Initiation of Hepatitis C Treatment After Release From Prison in a Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial: The C-LINK Study | Litcius