학술논문

Patient‐centered and integrated outreach care for chronic hepatitis C patients with serious mental illness in Taiwan
Document Type
Report
Source
The Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences. January, 2024, Vol. 40 Issue 1, p86, 8 p.
Subject
Patient compliance
Schizophrenia -- Care and treatment
Hepatitis C virus
Infection -- Care and treatment
Non-governmental organizations
Liver
RNA
Liver cirrhosis -- Care and treatment
Virus diseases -- Care and treatment
Medical screening
Language
English
ISSN
1607-551X
Abstract
Patients with serious mental illness have a higher risk of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection but suboptimal HCV care. The current study aimed to facilitate HCV treatment uptake by implementing an integrated outreach care model. Multidisciplinary outreach screening followed by HCV reflex testing and onsite treatment for schizophrenia patients was accomplished through the coordination of nongovernmental organizations, remote specialists, and local care providers. The objective was microelimination effectiveness, defined as the multiplication of the rates of anti‐HCV antibodies screening, accurate HCV RNA diagnosis, treatment allocation, treatment completion, and sustained virological response (SVR12; no detectable HCV RNA throughout 12 weeks in the post‐treatment follow‐up period). A total of 1478 of the 2300 (64.3%) psychiatric patients received HCV mass screening. Seventy‐three (4.9%) individuals were seropositive for anti‐HCV antibodies. Of the 73 anti‐HCV seropositive patients, all (100%) received HCV reflex testing, and 29 (37.7%) patients had HCV viremia. Eight patients (34.8%) had advanced liver disease, including 3 with liver cirrhosis and 2 with newly diagnosed hepatocellular carcinoma. Twenty‐three of the 24 (95.8%) patients who stayed in the healthcare system received and completed 8 weeks of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir treatment and post‐treatment follow‐up without significant DDIs or adverse events. The SVR12 rate was 100%. The microelimination effectiveness in the current study was 61.6%. Individuals with serious mental illness are underserved and suffer from diagnostic delays. This patient‐centered and integrated outreach program facilitated HCV care in this marginalized population.
INTRODUCTION Although the World Health Organization (WHO) has committed to achieving viral elimination by 2030, an estimated 60 million individuals were infected in 2020, and the majority of countries are [...]