Department of Epidemiology, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 4;15(11):e0241615. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241615. eCollection 2020.
The recent introduction of direct acting antivirals for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) has dramatically improved treatment options for HCV infected patients. However, in the United States (US) treatment uptake has been low and time to initiation of therapy has been long. We sought to examine provider perspectives of facilitators and barriers to HCV treatment delivery.
From June to August 2019, we conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with medical staff providing HCV care as part of a university medical center in Los Angeles, CA. In order to understand the HCV treatment process, we interviewed key staff members providing care to the majority of HCV patients seeking care at the university medical center, including hepatologists and infectious disease specialists as well as key nursing and pharmacy staff. The interviews focused on workload and activities required for HCV treatment initiation for non-cirrhotic, treatment naïve patients.
Providers noted that successful HCV treatment delivery was reliant on a care model involving close collaboration between a team of providers, in particular requiring a highly coordinated effort between dedicated nursing and pharmacy staff. The HCV care team overwhelmingly reported that the process of insurance authorization was the greatest obstacle delaying treatment initiation and noted that very few patient level factors served as a barrier to treatment uptake.
In the US, prior authorization for HCV treatment is a requirement for most public and private insurance plans. In an era with access to therapies that allow for a cure-and until revocation of prior authorization for HCV treatment is a reality-implementing strategies that can expedite authorization to accelerate treatment access are critical. Not only will this benefit patients, but it has the potential to help expand treatment to settings that are otherwise too resource strained to successfully deliver HCV care.
直接作用抗病毒药物(DAA)的出现,显著改善了丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染者的治疗选择。然而,在美国(US),接受治疗的人数仍然较少,治疗开始的时间也较长。我们试图探讨医疗服务提供者在提供 HCV 治疗方面的促进因素和障碍。
2019 年 6 月至 8 月,我们对加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市一所大学医疗中心提供 HCV 护理的医务人员进行了深入的半结构化访谈。为了了解 HCV 治疗过程,我们采访了为大学医疗中心大多数寻求 HCV 护理的患者提供护理的主要工作人员,包括肝病专家和传染病专家以及主要的护理和药剂师。访谈重点是为非肝硬化、未经治疗的初治患者启动 HCV 治疗所需的工作量和活动。
提供者指出,成功的 HCV 治疗交付依赖于一个涉及多组医疗服务提供者紧密合作的护理模式,特别是需要专门的护理和药剂师团队之间进行高度协调的努力。HCV 护理团队绝大多数人报告说,保险授权过程是延迟治疗启动的最大障碍,并指出很少有患者因素成为治疗接受的障碍。
在美国,大多数公共和私人保险计划都要求对 HCV 治疗进行事先授权。在能够治愈 HCV 的治疗方法的时代,直到撤销 HCV 治疗的事先授权成为现实之前,实施能够加速授权以加速治疗的策略至关重要。这不仅将使患者受益,而且还有可能帮助扩大治疗范围,使那些资源紧张的地区也能够成功地提供 HCV 护理。