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Hepatitis C treatment for difficult to access populations: can telementoring (as distinct from telemedicine) help?

Authors :
Scott Davison
Ann Glass
Waled Mohsen
Miriam T. Levy
Sanjeev Arora
Patrick Chan
Marlize Mouton
Tenzin Lama
Quyen Tran
Cherry Cobrador
Michelle C Whelan
Ernest Young
Source :
Internal Medicine Journal. 49:351-357
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Although hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is curable, treatment of difficult to access populations (DTAP) presents unique challenges. Project ECHO (PE) (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) is a telementoring programme adopted to support clinicians treating DTAP. AIMS To determine if the PE model supports primary care clinicians treating HCV and to compare cohort of PE patients with those in a tertiary liver clinic (TLC). METHODS Weekly PE group video conferences were conducted. Clinical information, laboratory indices, psychosocial elements and treatment outcomes, including sustained virological response (SVR) data were recorded in the first 100 consecutive cases and retrospectively compared to 100 consecutive patients seen at a TLC from July 2016 to April 2017. RESULTS Some patient characteristics were similar between PE and TLC: gender (72% vs 75% male; P = 0.23), median age (45 vs 50; P = 0.344) and the proportion of treatment naive patients (95.0% vs 90.9%). Treatment for HCV was commenced in 78% of the PE patients and 81% of the TLC patients; 67/68 of the TLC patients and 60/61 PE patients with virological follow up who completed treatment and attended follow up have confirmed SVR. PE patients are more likely to have ongoing substance use (44% vs 17% P < 0.001), be active intravenous drug users (32% vs 17%; P < 0.001) and polysubstance abusers (26% vs 7%; P < 0.001) and were more likely to be taking opioid substitution therapy (74% vs 20%; P < 0.001). Indigenous patients were three times more greatly represented in PE (15% vs 5%; P = 0.018). CONCLUSION PE is an effective model to support primary healthcare providers treating HCV in DTAP with similar rates of treatment uptake and SVR compared to patients in TLC.

Details

ISSN :
14455994 and 14440903
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Internal Medicine Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e8cbbd91d69cd3d828608a3baec7f8cf