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A decade after first DAA, only one in three are HCV free


 

What can physicians do?

Physicians can help improve HCV treatment and outcomes by being aware of the current testing guidelines, Dr. Wester said.

Guidelines now call for hepatitis C screening at least once in a lifetime for all adults, except in settings where the prevalence of HCV infection is less than 0.1%. They also call for screening during each pregnancy, with the same regional-prevalence exception.

Recommendations include curative treatment “for nearly everybody who is living with hepatitis C,” Dr. Wester added.

These CDC guidelines came out in April 2020, a time when the medical focus shifted to COVID-19, and that may have hurt awareness, she noted.

Physicians can also help by fighting back against non–evidence-based reasons insurance companies give for restricting coverage, Dr. Wester said.

Those restrictions include requiring specialists to prescribe DAA agents instead of allowing primary care physicians to do so, as well as requiring patients to have advanced liver disease or requiring patients to demonstrate sobriety or prove they are receiving counseling prior to their being eligible for treatment, Dr. Wester said.

Prior authorization a problem

Stacey B. Trooskin MD, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, told this news organization that prior authorization has been a major barrier for obtaining medications. Prior authorization requirements differ by state.

The paperwork must be submitted by already-stretched physician offices, and appeals are common. In that time, the window for keeping patients with HCV in the health care system may be lost, said Dr. Trooskin, chief medical adviser to the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable.

“We know that about half of all Medicaid programs have removed prior authorization for most patients entirely,” she said, “but there are still half that require prior authorization.”

Action at the federal level is also needed, Dr. Trooskin said.

The countries that are successfully eliminating HCV and have successfully deployed the lifesaving medications provide governmental support for meeting patients where they are, she added.

Support can include inpatient and outpatient substance use disorder treatment programs or support in mental health settings, she noted.

“It’s not enough to want patients to come into their primary care provider and for that primary care provider to screen them,” Dr. Trooskin said. “This is about creating health care infrastructure so that we are finding patients at greatest risk for hepatitis C and integrating hepatitis C treatment into the services they are already accessing.”

Coauthor Harvey W. Kaufman, MD, is an employee of and owns stock in Quest Diagnostics. Coauthor William A. Meyer III, PhD, is a consultant to Quest Diagnostics. No other potential conflicts of interest were disclosed. Dr. Trooskin oversees C-Change, a hepatitis C elimination program, which receives funding from Gilead Sciences.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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