Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
3000 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-01-21
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Investigators will evaluate this via a 3-arm, individual-level randomized clinical trial, in which treatment assignment probabilities vary according to participants' estimated propensity for treatment failure at baseline (precision randomization). An estimated 3,000 persons will be enrolled and randomized at 7 community-based integrated care centers (ICCs) across India across a duration of 18 - 24 months. Data from these 7 ICCs on early HIV treatment refills/viral suppression (3-6 months after antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation) will be used to develop and validate an algorithm to predict propensity for HCV treatment failure. Prior to treatment initiation, each participant will undergo a questionnaire to capture information on barriers/ facilitators to treatment adherence identified in the prediction model in order to determine the propensity for HCV treatment failure (minimal or elevated risk). Individuals will be preferentially randomized to the support level that matches their failure risk. Those at elevated risk for treatment failure will be randomized at an allocation ratio of 3:2:1 for Arm 3 (high intensity support), Arm 2 (medium intensity support) and Arm 1 (low intensity support), respectively. Conversely, those at minimal risk will be randomized at a ratio of 1:2:3 to Arm 3 (high intensity support), Arm 2 (medium intensity support) and Arm 1 (low intensity support), respectively. Participants and study staff will be blinded to the risk classification (minimal, elevated) but, because of the nature of the interventions, blinding to intervention assignment is not possible.
Persons will be treated for HCV according to the standard of care in India. Minimal laboratory monitoring will be used except when clinically indicated. Participants with decompensated cirrhosis will be excluded from treatment.
All HIV/HCV co-infected participants and those HCV monoinfected participants who achieve SVR will be followed post-treatment. These individuals will be followed every six months after the SVR assessment to assess HCV reinfection and HIV viral suppression (among HIV/HCV coinfected participants) for up to 30 months after SVR.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Arm 1: Low Intensity Intervention
4 weeks dispensation + standard adherence counseling
Low intensity HCV treatment adherence support
A 28-day supply of medication will be dispensed to participants at entry, 4 weeks, and 8 weeks. Participants will receive standard adherence counseling at entry and every refill pickup/home or field delivery. Participants will have access to all of the services available at the ICC including facilitated linkage to referrals as needed. Site staff will routinely track clients who miss refill appointments in real-time using standard tracking measurements
Arm 2: Medium Intensity Intervention
4 weeks dispensation + support from patient navigator
Medium intensity HCV treatment adherence support
The medium intensity intervention will include standard of care dispensation of a 28-day supply of medication at entry, 4 weeks and 8 weeks. Participants will be assigned to a patient navigator (PN) and receive tailored patient navigation support for medication reminders, picking up medication refills (or home or field delivery of study medications), overcoming barriers as well as service linkage. Participant will be contacted by the PN at least once every two weeks.
Arm 3: High Intensity Intervention
Directly Observed Therapy with flexible dispensing and support from patient navigator
High intensity HCV treatment adherence support
The high intensity intervention will involve patient-centered DOT with flexibility in terms of the frequency of pickup and the site of DOT (ICC, field-based) with a minimum of at least 1 observed dose per week. Participants in this arm will also receive PN support for overcoming barriers and service linkage similar to participants in Arm 2. The main differences between Arms 2 and 3 are: (i) medications will not be dispensed for more than one week at a time (to coincide with opioid agonist therapy (OAT) dosing, where applicable); and (ii) ≥1 dose/week will be observed.
Interventions
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Low intensity HCV treatment adherence support
A 28-day supply of medication will be dispensed to participants at entry, 4 weeks, and 8 weeks. Participants will receive standard adherence counseling at entry and every refill pickup/home or field delivery. Participants will have access to all of the services available at the ICC including facilitated linkage to referrals as needed. Site staff will routinely track clients who miss refill appointments in real-time using standard tracking measurements
Medium intensity HCV treatment adherence support
The medium intensity intervention will include standard of care dispensation of a 28-day supply of medication at entry, 4 weeks and 8 weeks. Participants will be assigned to a patient navigator (PN) and receive tailored patient navigation support for medication reminders, picking up medication refills (or home or field delivery of study medications), overcoming barriers as well as service linkage. Participant will be contacted by the PN at least once every two weeks.
High intensity HCV treatment adherence support
The high intensity intervention will involve patient-centered DOT with flexibility in terms of the frequency of pickup and the site of DOT (ICC, field-based) with a minimum of at least 1 observed dose per week. Participants in this arm will also receive PN support for overcoming barriers and service linkage similar to participants in Arm 2. The main differences between Arms 2 and 3 are: (i) medications will not be dispensed for more than one week at a time (to coincide with opioid agonist therapy (OAT) dosing, where applicable); and (ii) ≥1 dose/week will be observed.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Active HCV infection confirmed by a detectable HCV RNA by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (HCV RNA ≥ 30 copies/ml) within 90 days prior to study entry.
* Liver disease stage defined as non-cirrhotic or compensated cirrhotic (metric/diagnostic criteria used for fibrosis staging) within 90 days prior to study entry.
i. Albumin \>3.0 g/L. ii. Hemoglobin \>8.0 g/dL for women; \>9.0 g/dL for men. iii. Platelet count \>50,000/mm3. iv. Calculated creatinine clearance (CrCl) using Cockcroft-Gault method \>30 mL/min. v. Aspartate aminotransferase (AST/SGOT) \<10 times the upper limit of the normal range (ULN). vi. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT/SGPT) \<10 times the ULN. vii. Total bilirubin \<1.5 times the ULN for participants not on atazanavir (ATV) and \<3 times the ULN for participants on ATV. viii. International normalized ratio (INR) \<1.5 times the ULN.
* Life expectancy greater than 1 year (as determined by study clinician)
* Willing to initiate HCV treatment
* Agree to be randomized to an adherence support strategy
* Ability and willingness to provide written informed consent
* Female participants of reproductive potential must not be pregnant
* All female participants of reproductive potential must agree not to participate in a conception process
* All female participants of reproductive potential must agree to use at least one reliable form of contraceptive while receiving protocol-specified medication, and for 6 weeks after stopping the medication.
Exclusion Criteria
* Planning to migrate within the next six months.
* Known allergy/sensitivity or any hypersensitivity to components of study drug(s) or their formulation.
* Acute or serious illness requiring systemic treatment and/or hospitalization within 30 days prior to study entry.
* In HIV positive participants, presence of active or acute AIDS-defining opportunistic infections within 30 days prior to study entry.
* Use of prohibited medications within the past 14 days prior to study entry.
* Evidence of decompensated liver disease on clinical exam.
* Evidence of active tuberculosis.
* Evidence of chronic hepatitis B infection (HBsAg positive).
* Currently on HCV treatment.
* Prior history of DAA-based HCV treatment
* Confirmed active SARS CoV-2 infection or suspected active SARS CoV-2 infection at enrollment.
* Currently nursing (breastfeeding).
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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YR Gaitonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education
OTHER
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
NIH
Johns Hopkins University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Sunil S Solomon, PhD MBBS MPH
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Y.R. Gaitonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education
Shruti H Mehta, PhD MPH
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Locations
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YR Gaitonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education
Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
Countries
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References
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Mehta SH, Lau BM, Ehrhardt S, McFall A, Gunaratne MP, Baishya J, Kedar A, Srikrishnan AK, Evans J, Loeb T, Pradeep A, Kumar MS, Thomas DL, Lucas GM, Solomon SS. A precision randomized trial to evaluate the impact of tailored hepatitis C treatment adherence support on HCV treatment outcomes among people who inject drugs in India: design and baseline characteristics of the STOP-C trial. Am J Epidemiol. 2025 Oct 7;194(10):2986-2998. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwae430.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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IRB00232125
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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