Experience Sharing: Micro-elimination of Hepatitis C virus infection in hemodialysis centers (ERASE-C)

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is prevalent in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis and can be attributed to the nosocomial transmission in hemodialysis centers. Due to the highly prevalent and contiguous property in the close-contact environment, and the lack of an available vaccine, the strategy of ‘treatment as prevention’ is imperative for the control of HCV infection in the uremic hemodialysis population. ERASE-C program implements a universal outreach screening strategy, followed by either link-to-care or decentralized on-site treatment in 18 hemodialysis centers, in order to achieve micro-elimination of HCV for uremic patients in hemodialysis centers.

Schematic diagram of ERASE-C

Results of ERASE-C

The ERASE-C campaign has drastically increased the overall treatment uptake and reduced the rate of HCV viremia in hemodialysis centers by 88.3% (from 7.7% to 0.9%). Most of the hemodialysis centers accomplished HCV micro-elimination and even “No-C HD”. The on-site outreach treatment approach is a patient centered healthcare strategy to facilitate the HCV care cascade and serves as a good model to eliminate HCV infections in this special clinical setting. More importantly, this program proves the concept of “treatment as prevention”.

Abbreviation: HCV, hepatitis C virus; DAA, direct-acting antiviral agent.
Reference: Yu ML, Huang CF, Wei YJ, Lin WY, Lin YH, Hsu PY, Hsu CT, Liu TW, Lee JJ, Niu SW, Huang JC, Hung TS, Yeh ML, Huang CI, Liang PC, Hsieh MY, Chen SC, Huang JF, Chang JM, Chiu YW, Dai CY, Hwang SJ, Chuang WL; FORMOSA-LIKE investigators. Establishment of an outreach, grouping healthcare system to achieve microelimination of HCV for uremic patients in haemodialysis centres (ERASE-C). Gut. 2021;70(12):2349-2358.
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