Title

Elimination of HCV Through Linkage and In Prison Treatment of Incarcerated Populations (ECLIPSE)
Elimination of HCV Through Linkage and In Prison Treatment of Incarcerated Populations
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Withdrawn
  • Study Participants

    0
Hepatitis C (HCV) is a chronic infection with significant morbidity and mortality. The development of directly acting antivirals (DAA) has dramatically improved the cure rate of HCV treatment. People who experience incarceration are disproportionately infected and often involved in ongoing transmission of disease. However, despite availability of effective treatment, people who experience incarceration are often unable to access this curative therapy, and are often not readily engaged in medical care upon release. This perpetuates transmission and progression of disease in an incredibly high risk, marginalized population. Therefore, in order to effectively eliminate HCV, it is imperative that the epidemic of HCV in prisons is addressed, and that models of care are established for treatment of HCV in incarcerated individuals, both during and after incarceration.

As such, the investigators propose a comprehensive model of care to engage incarcerated individuals in treatment of HCV upon release from prison. This care is provided in conjunction with collocated services to prevent HCV reinfection, including opioid agonist therapy. This pilot trial will demonstrate whether a comprehensive model of care can effectively cure HCV in recently incarcerated individuals, while simultaneously treating opioid use disorder and preventing HCV reinfection.
Study Started
Oct 01
2021
Anticipated
Primary Completion
Mar 30
2022
Anticipated
Study Completion
Oct 30
2024
Anticipated
Last Update
May 06
2021

Drug Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir [pibrentasvir (Mavyret), glecaprevir (Mavyret)]

Treatment for HCV Infection

In prison treatment arm No Intervention

Of patients who achieved SVR, 100 inmates will be enrolled for long-term monitoring for re-infection after they have completed treatment. Patients will be seen every 6 months to test for reinfection, however they will not be subject to any medical or behavioral interventions through the study team. Limited opioid agonist therapy may be available as per the standard practice of the DOC, however syringe exchange and other harm reduction services will not be accessible to inmates, per DOC policy.

Community Linkage - Rapid Initiation Arm Active Comparator

The rapid initiation group will receive HCV medication immediately upon release from prison/jail.

Community Linkage - Clinic-Based Initiation Arm Active Comparator

The group will receive medication after attending first ANCHOR clinic visit.

In prison - Retrospective Review No Intervention

a retrospective review of de-identified available data provided by the DOC for all patients previously treated with DAAs through standard of care in the DOC will be reviewed for rates of SVR.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Age greater than or equal to 18 years old
Able and willing to sign informed consent
For the community linkage arm: Chronically infected with HCV, defined as any individual with documentation of positive HCV antibody and positive HCV RNA test (HCV RNA of 2,000 IU/mL or greater).
For the community linkage arm: ineligible for treatment through the prison/jail without a known sentence longer than 9 months, as of consent date
For the in-prison arm: Achievement of SVR through the previous standard of care treatment through the DOC

Exclusion Criteria:

Decompensated cirrhosis (Child-Pugh B or C)
Pregnant or breastfeeding women
For community linkage arm: Prior treatment with a direct acting antiviral regimen
For community linkage arm: Any co-medications that are contraindicated or not recommended for concomitant use with glecaprevir-pibrentasvir
Poor venous access not allowing screening laboratory collection
Have any condition that the investigator considers a contraindication to study participation
No Results Posted