Point of care testing for hepatitis C in the priority settings of mental health, prisons and drug & alcohol facilities - the PROMPt Study.

Journal: Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America

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Affiliated Institutions:  Infectious Diseases Department, Royal Adelaide Hospital, South Australia, Australia. Disease Elimination, Burnet Institute, Victoria, Australia. Gastroenterolgy & Hepatology Department, Royal Adelaide Hospital, South Australia, Australia. Hepatology and Liver Transplantation Medicine Unit, Southern Adelaide Local Health Network, South Australia, Australia. Drug and Alcohol Services, South Australia, Australia. Communicable Disease Control Branch, SA Health, South Australia, Australia.

Abstract summary 

A barrier to hepatitis C virus (HCV) cure is conventional testing. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of HCV antibody and RNA point-of-care-testing (POCT) on testing rates, linkage to care, treatment and acceptability of testing in three priority settings in Australia.Participants were enrolled in an interventional cohort study at a reception prison, inpatient mental health service (MHS), and inpatient alcohol and other drug (AOD) unit-between October 2020 and December 2021. HCV POCT was performed using SD Bioline HCV antibody fingerstick test and a reflexive Xpert® HCV Viral Load Fingerstick test using capillary blood samples. A retrospective audit of HCV testing and treatment data was performed at each site for the preceding 12-month period to generate a historical control.1,549 participants received a HCV antibody test with 17% (264/1,549) receiving a positive result, of which 21% (55/264) tested HCV RNA positive. Across all settings the rate of testing per year significantly increased between the historical controls and the study intervention period by three-fold (RR:2.57 95% CI: 2.32, 2.85) for HCV antibody testing and four-fold (RR:1.62; 95% CI:1.31, 2.01) for RNA testing. Treatment uptake was higher during the POCT intervention (86%, 47/55; P=0.010) compared to the historical controls (61%, 27/44).This study demonstrated across three settings that the use of HCV antibody and RNA POCT increased testing rates, treatment uptake linkage to care. The testing model was highly acceptable for most participants.ACTRN-12621001578897.

Authors & Co-authors:  McCartney Ralton Dawe Richmond Zobel Wigg Cock Tse Rees Shaw Ferguson

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  11
Identifiers
Doi : ciae155
SSN : 1537-6591
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Hepatitis C virus;linkage to care;point-of-care testing;screening
Study Design
Cohort Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States