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Implementation of a re-linkage to care strategy in patients with chronic hepatitis C who were lost to follow-up in Latin America

Authors :
Manuel Mendizabal
Marcos Thompson
Esteban Gonzalez‐Ballerga
Margarita Anders
Graciela E. Castro‐Narro
Mario G. Pessoa
Hugo Cheinquer
Gabriel Mezzano
Ana Palazzo
Ezequiel Ridruejo
Valeria Descalzi
Jose A. Velarde‐Ruiz Velasco
Sebastian Marciano
Linda Muñoz
Maria I. Schinoni
Jaime Poniachik
Rosalía Perazzo
Eira Cerda
Francisco Fuster
Adriana Varon
Sandro Ruiz García
Alejandro Soza
Cecilia Cabrera
Andres J. Gomez‐Aldana
Flor de María Beltrán
Solange Gerona
Daniel Cocozzella
Fernando Bessone
Nelia Hernández
Cristina Alonso
Melina Ferreiro
Florencia Antinucci
Aldo Torre
Bruna D. Moutinho
Silvia Coelho Borges
Fernando Gomez
Maria Dolores Murga
Federico Piñero
Gisela F. Sotera
Jhonier A. Ocampo
Valeria A. Cortés Mollinedo
Daniela Simian
Marcelo O. Silva
Source :
Journal of viral hepatitisREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To achieve WHO's goal of eliminating hepatitis C virus (HCV), innovative strategies must be designed to diagnose and treat more patients. Therefore, we aimed to describe an implementation strategy to identify patients with HCV who were lost to follow-up (LTFU) and offer them re-linkage to HCV care. We conducted an implementation study utilizing a strategy to contact patients with HCV who were not under regular follow-up in 13 countries from Latin America. Patients with HCV were identified by the international classification of diseases (ICD-9/10) or equivalent. Medical records were then reviewed to confirm the diagnosis of chronic HCV infection defined by anti-HCV+ and detectable HCV-RNA. Identified patients who were not under follow-up by a liver specialist were contacted by telephone or email, and offered a medical reevaluation. A total of 10,364 patients were classified to have HCV. After reviewing their medical charts, 1349 (13%) had undetectable HCV-RNA or were wrongly coded. Overall, 9015 (86.9%) individuals were identified with chronic HCV infection. A total of 5096 (56.5%) patients were under routine HCV care and 3919 (43.5%) had been LTFU. We were able to contact 1617 (41.3%) of the 3919 patients who were LTFU at the primary medical institution, of which 427 (26.4%) were cured at a different institutions or were dead. Of the remaining patients, 906 (76.1%) were candidates for retrieval. In our cohort, about one out of four patients with chronic HCV who were LTFU were candidates to receive treatment. This strategy has the potential to be effective, accessible and significantly impacts on the HCV care cascade.

Details

ISSN :
13652893
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of viral hepatitisREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....111d45e0dbad8c872818af23dc783269