Abstract

Background & AimsNew models of HCV care are needed to reach people who inject drugs (PWID). The primary aim was to evaluate HCV treatment uptake among HCV RNA positive individuals identified by point‐of‐care (POC) testing and liver disease assessment in a peer‐driven decentralized mobile clinic.MethodsThis prospective study included consecutive patients assessed in a mobile clinic visiting 32 small towns in Southern Norway from November 2019 to November 2020. The clinic was staffed by a bus driver and a social educator offering POC HCV RNA testing (GeneXpert®), liver disease staging (FibroScan® 402) and peer support. Viremic individuals were offered prompt pan‐genotypic treatment prescribed by local hospital‐employed specialists following a brief telephone assessment.ResultsAmong 296 tested individuals, 102 (34%) were HCV RNA positive (median age 51 years, 77% male, 24% advanced liver fibrosis/cirrhosis). All participants had a history of injecting drug use, 71% reported past 3 months injecting, and 37% received opioid agonist treatment. Treatment uptake within 6 months following enrolment was achieved in 88%. Treatment uptake was negatively associated with recent injecting (aHR 0.60; 95% CI 0.36–0.98), harmful alcohol consumption (aHR 0.44; 95% CI 0.20–0.99), and advanced liver fibrosis/cirrhosis (aHR 0.44; 95% CI 0.25–0.80). HCV RNA prevalence increased with age (OR 1.81 per 10‐year increase; 95% 1.41–2.32), ranging from 3% among those <30 years to 55% among those ≥60 years.ConclusionsA peer‐driven mobile HCV clinic is an effective and feasible model of care that should be considered for broader implementation to reach PWID outside the urban centres.

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