1. Emergency Department versus Community Screening on Hepatitis C Follow-Up Care
- Author
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Austin T. Jones, Lisa Moreno-Walton, Torrence Tran, Christopher Briones, Kanayo Okeke-Eweni, Rachael Stevens, Kacie Isaacson, Hua He, and Patricia J. Kissinger
- Subjects
Emergency Medicine ,Aftercare ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,RNA ,General Medicine ,Hepacivirus ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Fibrosis ,Hepatitis C ,Article ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Emergency department (ED) hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening programs are proliferating, and it is unknown whether EDs are more effective than traditional community screening at promoting HCV follow-up care. The objective of this study was to investigate whether patients screened HCV seropositive (HCV+) in the ED are linked to care and retained in treatment more successfully than patients screened HCV+ in the community. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was performed including patients screened HCV+ at twelve screening facilities in xx, xx from March 1, 2015 to July 31, 2017. Treatment outcomes, including retention and time to follow-up care, were assessed using the HCV continuum of care model. RESULTS: ED patients (n=3,008) were significantly more likely to achieve RNA confirmation (aRR=1.91, 95% CI=1.54–2.37), initiate HCV therapy (aRR=2.23 [1.76–2.83]), complete HCV therapy (aRR=1.77 [1.40–2.24]), and achieve HCV functional cure (aRR=2.80 [1.09–7.23]) compared to community-screened patients (n=322). ED screening was associated with decreased likelihood of fibrosis staging (aRR=0.65 [0.51–0.82]) and no difference in linkage to specialty care (aRR=1.03 [0.69–1.53]). In time to follow up, RNA confirmation occurred at faster rates in the ED (aHR=2.26 [1.86–2.72]), although these patients completed fibrosis staging at slower rates (aHR=0.49 [0.38–0.63]) than community patients. CONCLUSIONS: Compared to community screening, HCV screening in the ED was associated with higher rates of disease confirmation, treatment initiation/completion, and cure. Our findings provide new evidence that EDs may be the most effective setting to screen patients for HCV to promote follow-up care.
- Published
- 2022