HCV treatment initiation in the era of universal direct acting antiviral coverage – Improvements in access and persistent barriers
•Universal coverage of DAAs has been introduced in Canada in 2018.•Treatment initiation rates have increased among PWID.•Barriers such as male gender, cocaine use and incarceration persist.•Contact with a PCP and engagement in OAT's facilitator effects have plateaued. Barriers to HCV treatment...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The International journal of drug policy 2023-03, Vol.113, p.103954-103954, Article 103954 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Universal coverage of DAAs has been introduced in Canada in 2018.•Treatment initiation rates have increased among PWID.•Barriers such as male gender, cocaine use and incarceration persist.•Contact with a PCP and engagement in OAT's facilitator effects have plateaued.
Barriers to HCV treatment initiation persisted after the introduction of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) in Canada among people who inject drugs (PWID); whether DAA universal coverage lifted these barriers remain unknown. We assessed the evolution of HCV treatment initiation and associated factors among PWID in Montreal, Canada, comparing eras of IFN-based regimens (2011-2013), of DAA restricted access (2014-02/2018), and universal coverage (03/2018-03/2020).
We included chronically HCV-infected participants followed in a community-based PWID cohort in Montreal, Canada between 2011 and 03/2020 and collected data at 3-month intervals. Time-updated Cox regressions were conducted to examine 9 variables of interest associated with treatment initiation overall and for each of the three eras.
Of 276 participants, 126 initiated treatment during follow-up. Yearly initiation increased from 3% in 2011 to 19% in 2016, and 54% in 2018. PWID aged >40 (vs. ≤40) were twice as likely to initiate treatment in 2014-02/2018 (HR: 2.02 95%CI: [1.24-3.28]) but not in other periods (2011-2013: 0.55 [0.25-1.22]; 03/2018-03/2020: 1.14 [0.59-2.22])). Odds of initiation were lower for men than women in all periods, with women three times more likely to be treated under universal coverage (0.30 [0.11-0.77] vs 2011-2013: 0.67 [0.25-1.78] and 2014-02/2018: 0.75 [0.42-1.35]). Recent incarceration was negatively associated with initiation throughout all periods (2011-2013: 0.57 [0.13-2.43]; 2014-03/2018: 0.39 [0.17-0.91]; 03/2018-03/2020: 0.25 [0.07-0.83]). Barriers associated with high injection frequency appear to have diminished since DAA introduction (2014-02/2018: 0.71 [0.42-1.20]; 03/2018-03/2020: 1.05 [0.52-2.11] vs. 2011-2013: 0.26 [0.08-0.88]). Contact with a primary care physician and engagement in opioid agonist therapy were positively associated with treatment initiation, though estimates were attenuated under universal coverage relative to previous eras.
Treatment initiation rates have increased since the introduction of universal DAA coverage, though barriers such as incarceration persist. |
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ISSN: | 0955-3959 1873-4758 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.drugpo.2023.103954 |