Removal of medicaid restrictions were associated with increased hepatitis C virus treatment rates, but disparities persist

Despite the release of a growing number of direct‐acting antivirals and evolving policy landscape, many of those diagnosed with hepatitis C virus (HCV) have not received treatment. Those from vulnerable populations are at particular risk of being unable to access treatment, threatening World Health...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of viral hepatitis 2022-05, Vol.29 (5), p.366-374
Hauptverfasser: Nephew, Lauren D., Wang, Yumin, Mohamed, Kawthar, Nichols, Deborah, Rawl, Susan M., Orman, Eric, Desai, Archita P., Patidar, Kavish R., Ghabril, Marwan, Chalasani, Naga, Kasting, Monica L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the release of a growing number of direct‐acting antivirals and evolving policy landscape, many of those diagnosed with hepatitis C virus (HCV) have not received treatment. Those from vulnerable populations are at particular risk of being unable to access treatment, threatening World Health Organization (WHO) HCV elimination goals. The aim of this study was to understand the association between direct‐acting antivirals approvals, HCV‐related policy changes and access to HCV virus treatment in Indiana, and to explore access to treatment by race, birth cohort and insurance type. We performed a retrospective cohort study of adults with HCV from 05/2011‐03/2021, using statewide electronic health data. Nine policy and treatment changes were defined a priori. A Lowess curve evaluated treatment trends over time. Monthly screening and treatment rates were examined. Multivariable logistic regression explored predictors of treatment. The population (N = 10,336) was 13.4% Black, 51.8% was born after 1965 and 44.7% was Medicaid recipients. Inflections in the Lowess curve defined four periods: (1) Interferon + DAA, (2) early direct‐acting antivirals, (3) Medicaid expansion/optimization and (4) Medicaid restrictions (fibrosis/prescriber) removed. The largest increase in monthly treatment rates was during period 4, when Medicaid prescriber and fibrosis restrictions were removed (2.4 persons per month [PPM] in period 1 to 72.3 PPM in period 4, p 
ISSN:1352-0504
1365-2893
DOI:10.1111/jvh.13661