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Simplifying Hepatitis C Pathways for People Who Inject Drugs in Armenia, Georgia, and Tanzania

Simplifying Hepatitis C Pathways for People Who Inject Drugs in Armenia, Georgia, and Tanzania (CUTTS HepC): a Non-randomised, Quasiexperimental, Prospective Comparative Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Early Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06159504
Acronym
CUTTS HepC
Enrollment
3040
Registered
2023-12-06
Start date
2024-10-03
Completion date
2026-12-31
Last updated
2025-07-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hepatitis C, RDT

Keywords

Point of care (PoC), Nucleic acid testing, Qualitative interviews, Feasibility, Acceptability, Cost-effectiveness, Modelling

Brief summary

The goal of this non-randomised, quasi-experimental, prospective comparative trial is to trial simplified care pathways for hepatitis C testing and treatment for people who inject drugs in Armenia, Georgia, and Tanzania. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. What is the feasibility of implementing a hepatitis C simplified care and same-day treatment care model in community and harm reduction settings in the three study countries? 2. Does a same-day treatment initiation model involving only POC antibody tests (with a shortened read-time) increase hepatitis C treatment uptake and SVR12 outcome (cure) among people who inject drugs compared with a simplified care model involving POC antibody followed by a confirmatory RNA test? 3. What is the comparative cost-effectiveness between a same-day antibody only hepatitis C testing and treatment model and the simplified care model (POC antibody/confirmatory RNA test) model? Participants will: * be enrolled in a new simplified model of care in each country (Arm 1). After the enrolment target is met for Arm 1 (approx. 3-9 months into implementation) new participants will be enrolled into a same-day treatment trial, using presumptive treatment after a reactive POC test result at shortened read-time (5minutes) (Arm 2) * if in Arm 1, participants will commence SOF-VEL DAA treatment after receiving an RNA test to confirm current hepatitis C infection. They will then continue along the treatment pathway, returning for RNA testing 4-16 weeks after SVR12 to determine cure. * if in Arm 2, participants will begin SOF-VEL DAA treatment on the same day as the 5 minute RDT testing. They will then continue along the treatment pathway, returning for RNA testing 4-16 weeks after SVR12 to determine cure. Researchers will compare cure and participant retention rates between the two groups.

Detailed description

The investigators will conduct a study to trial a new, simplified, and lower cost clinical pathway and determine its feasibility, effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and acceptability in Armenia, Georgia, and Tanzania. This is a non-randomised, quasi-experimental, prospective comparative trial with approximately 350 participants initiated onto hepatitis C treatment in each arm. Arm one is a simplified care model (following global guidance) with hepatitis C treatment commencing after a rapid hepatitis C antibody test and a confirmatory positive hepatitis C ribonucleic acid (RNA) test. Arm two will involve same day treatment commencement following a positive rapid antibody test without confirmatory RNA testing prior to treatment initiation (RNA testing will be completed after treatment is provided). In arm two, the decision to treat will be based on the result of an early read time (\< 5 mins) of a rapid antibody test which previous research findings suggest correlates strongly with a hepatitis C RNA positive test result. All positive participants will be treated with sofosbuvir (400mg) and velpatasvir (100mg), self-administered orally once per day for 12 weeks. Hepatitis C cure will be assessed by sustained virological response (SVR) laboratory testing. The first primary outcome is feasibility, measured throughout the care cascade. Primary outcomes compared across the two arms will be the proportion of participants 1) commencing treatment and 2) achieving SVR. Test concordance and validity of the early read time will be assessed against laboratory RNA test results (which will also guide decisions to continue or cease treatment in Arm 2). A mixed effects model will be used to assess study outcomes and infectious diseases modelling will determine cost-effectiveness. The acceptability and feasibility of the models will be assessed through thematic analysis of participant and practitioner interviews, and site assessments.

Interventions

400mg of SOF and 100mg of VEL self administered daily as a tablet.

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTShortened read time of rapid diagnostic test for hepatitis C virus.

Administered once during hepatitis C testing. Test is read after 5 minutes rather than its usual time of 20 minutes.

Sponsors

UNITAID
CollaboratorOTHER
Burnet Institute
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Bristol
CollaboratorOTHER
International Network of People who Use Drugs
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Médecins du Monde
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Two study groups will be running in tandem/parallel to one another at the same time.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* 18 years or older * Able and willing to provide informed consent in local language * Not currently on or previously had treatment for hepatitis C * Attending site for needle / syringe program, OR self-reports ever injecting drugs

Exclusion criteria

* Self-reported history of decompensate cirrhosis of the liver * Women who are pregnant or breast-feeding * Self-report other significant co-morbidities such as uncontrolled HIV infection, history of renal dysfunction, tuberculosis infection, or chronic hepatitis B infection * Unable / unwilling to stop any contraindicated medications / supplements

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The feasibility of implementing a hepatitis C simplified care (Arm 1) and same-day treatment (Arm 2) care models in community and harm reduction settings in the three study countries.3 yearsMeasured through case report forms, interviews and study site checks.
The proportion of participants initiating hepatitis C treatment in simplified care Arm vs same-day treatment Arm.3 years
The proportion of participants who achieve SVR following hepatitis C treatment in simplified care Arm vs same-day treatment Arm.3 years
The comparative cost and cost-effectiveness of simplified care vs same-day treatment models of care.3 years

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The proportion of participants whose hepatitis C antibody test result at 5-min read-time concords with RNA test results.3 years
Participant acceptability of the hepatitis C simplified care and same-day treatment care models.3 yearsMeasured through interviews and surveys
The proportion of participants overtreated for hepatitis C in the same-day treatment Arm.3 years
Identification of the optimal cut-off read-time for hepatitis C antibody test to predict RNA positivity3 years
Practitioner acceptability of hepatitis C simplified care and same-day treatment care models3 yearsMeasured through interviews
The time to treatment initiation among participants in simplified care Arm vs same-day treatment Arm3 years
The proportion of participants who complete hepatitis C treatment in simplified care Arm vs same-day treatment Arm3 years

Countries

Armenia

Contacts

Primary ContactBridget Draper
bridget.draper@burnet.edu.au+61 413 272 698
Backup ContactMargaret Hellard
margaret.hellard@burnet.edu.au

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 26, 2026