Abstract

There is emerging evidence that Hepatitis C (HCV) treatment engagement is associated with change in drug behaviours and reduced drug-related death rates among people who inject drugs (PWID). The project aims to investigate whether HCV diagnosis and treatment engagement reduces all-cause mortality and drug-related death, and whether any effect is dependent on treatment regimen and intensity of engagement with staff. Case-control studies comparing: PWID with active HCV infection (PCR positive) to PWID HCV infected but spontaneously resolved (PCR negative); PCR-positive patients who engaged with treatment services to nonengagers; and patients who received interferon vs direct-acting antiviral (DAA) based treatment. No differences in risk of all-cause mortality or drug-related death between PCR-negative controls and PCR-positive cases were detected. The odds of all-cause mortality was 12.2 times higher in nonengaging persons compared to treatment engaging cases (aOR 12.15, 95% CI 7.03-20.99, P<.001). The odds of a drug-related death were 5.5 times higher in nonengaging persons compared with treatment engaging cases (aOR 5.52, 95% CI 2.67- 11.44, P<.001). No differences in risk of all-cause mortality or drug-related death between interferon-treated cases and DAA-treated controls were detected. HCV treatment engagement is significantly protective against all-cause mortality and drug-related death. This engagement effect is independent of treatment regimen, with the introduction of DAA therapies not increasing risk of drug-related death, suggesting intensity of HCV therapy provider interaction is not an important factor.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C (HCV) is a blood-borne virus and affects up to 1% of the Scottish Population.[1]

  • hepatitis C (HCV) treatment engagement is significantly protective against all-cause mortality and drug-related death

  • This engagement effect is independent of treatment regimen, with the introduction of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies not increasing risk of drug-related death, suggesting intensity of HCV therapy provider interaction is not an important factor

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C (HCV) is a blood-borne virus and affects up to 1% of the Scottish Population.[1] Around 90% of those infected with HCV acquire the virus through injecting drug use behaviour.[2] HCV related liver disease is a primary contributor to morbidity and mortality among people who inject drugs (PWID).[3] HCV is preventable, treatable and curable, with research supporting the treatment of active injecting drug users for Hepatitis C.4. There is evidence that HCV care engagement is associated with change in behaviours among PWID. Studies have demonstrated the positive impact of HCV status notification on reduction in injecting behaviour among PWID.[7,8] a systematic review highlighted the positive impact of HCV treatment on patients’ injecting and sharing behaviour.[9]

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