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Testing to sustain hepatitis C elimination targets in people who inject drugs: a network-based model

Testing to sustain hepatitis C elimination targets in people who inject drugs: a network-based model
Testing to sustain hepatitis C elimination targets in people who inject drugs: a network-based model

Little is known about the level of testing required to sustain elimination of hepatitis C (HCV), once achieved. In this study, we model the testing coverage required to maintain HCV elimination in an injecting network of people who inject drugs (PWID). We test the hypothesis that network-based strategies are a superior approach to deliver testing. We created a dynamic injecting network structure connecting 689 PWID based on empirical data. The primary outcome was the testing coverage required per month to maintain prevalence at the elimination threshold over 5 years. We compared four testing strategies. Without any testing or treatment provision, the prevalence of HCV increased from the elimination threshold (11.68%) to a mean of 25.4% (SD 2.96%) over the 5-year period. To maintain elimination with random testing, on average, 4.96% (SD 0.83%) of the injecting network needs to be tested per month. However, with a ‘bring your friends’ strategy, this was reduced to 3.79% (SD 0.64%) of the network (p <.001). The addition of contact tracing improved the efficiency of both strategies. In conclusion, we report that network-based approaches to testing such as ‘bring a friend’ initiatives and contact tracing lower the level of testing coverage required to maintain elimination.

elimination, hepatitis C, model, network, treatment
1352-0504
242-249
Siegele-Brown, Chloë
b65ca127-9b66-4a6e-9e3b-95c23755732d
Siegele-Brown, Martin
780a5ad7-3c78-4854-927c-1f9f1351806f
Cook, Charlotte
85b6be1f-823b-4f2b-9b4f-dc787fc4f037
Khakoo, Salim I.
6c16d2f5-ae80-4d9b-9100-6bfb34ad0273
Parkes, Julie
59dc6de3-4018-415e-bb99-13552f97e984
Wright, Mark
43325ef9-3459-4c75-b3bf-cf8d8dac2a21
Buchanan, Ryan M.
9499f713-f684-4046-be29-83cd9d6f834d
Siegele-Brown, Chloë
b65ca127-9b66-4a6e-9e3b-95c23755732d
Siegele-Brown, Martin
780a5ad7-3c78-4854-927c-1f9f1351806f
Cook, Charlotte
85b6be1f-823b-4f2b-9b4f-dc787fc4f037
Khakoo, Salim I.
6c16d2f5-ae80-4d9b-9100-6bfb34ad0273
Parkes, Julie
59dc6de3-4018-415e-bb99-13552f97e984
Wright, Mark
43325ef9-3459-4c75-b3bf-cf8d8dac2a21
Buchanan, Ryan M.
9499f713-f684-4046-be29-83cd9d6f834d

Siegele-Brown, Chloë, Siegele-Brown, Martin, Cook, Charlotte, Khakoo, Salim I., Parkes, Julie, Wright, Mark and Buchanan, Ryan M. (2023) Testing to sustain hepatitis C elimination targets in people who inject drugs: a network-based model. Journal of Viral Hepatitis, 30 (3), 242-249. (doi:10.1111/jvh.13786).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Little is known about the level of testing required to sustain elimination of hepatitis C (HCV), once achieved. In this study, we model the testing coverage required to maintain HCV elimination in an injecting network of people who inject drugs (PWID). We test the hypothesis that network-based strategies are a superior approach to deliver testing. We created a dynamic injecting network structure connecting 689 PWID based on empirical data. The primary outcome was the testing coverage required per month to maintain prevalence at the elimination threshold over 5 years. We compared four testing strategies. Without any testing or treatment provision, the prevalence of HCV increased from the elimination threshold (11.68%) to a mean of 25.4% (SD 2.96%) over the 5-year period. To maintain elimination with random testing, on average, 4.96% (SD 0.83%) of the injecting network needs to be tested per month. However, with a ‘bring your friends’ strategy, this was reduced to 3.79% (SD 0.64%) of the network (p <.001). The addition of contact tracing improved the efficiency of both strategies. In conclusion, we report that network-based approaches to testing such as ‘bring a friend’ initiatives and contact tracing lower the level of testing coverage required to maintain elimination.

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Journal of Viral Hepatitis - 2022 - Siegele‐Brown - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 December 2022
Published date: 1 March 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Viral Hepatitis published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: elimination, hepatitis C, model, network, treatment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475937
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475937
ISSN: 1352-0504
PURE UUID: 9d3a719b-828f-4341-ad16-eb7868d53a07
ORCID for Salim I. Khakoo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4057-9091
ORCID for Julie Parkes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6490-395X
ORCID for Ryan M. Buchanan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0850-5575

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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2023 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:52

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Contributors

Author: Chloë Siegele-Brown
Author: Martin Siegele-Brown
Author: Charlotte Cook
Author: Salim I. Khakoo ORCID iD
Author: Julie Parkes ORCID iD
Author: Mark Wright

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