Houston Chronicle Sunday

States are easing paths to treat hepatitis C

- Sandhya Raman

While national efforts to eliminate hepatitis C have faced setbacks because of increased drug use, the effect of COVID-19 and insurance complicati­ons, there’s a bright spot: Some states are now making it easier for patients to treat the disease.

Hepatitis C— a viral inflammati­on of the liver spread through blood and other bodily fluids that infects more than 2 million adults and contribute­s to 14,000 deaths annually — has increased in recent years, with the Infectious Diseases Society of America estimating that hepatitis C infections spiked 71 percent from 2014 through 2018.

There’s a cure for it. Gilead’s two direct-acting antiviral drugs — Sovaldi and Harvoni — have been available for nearly a decade. The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Sovaldi in December 2013 and Harvoni in October 2014. Since then, the FDA has approved other antivirals.

Still, a high price tag and administra­tive hurdles to covering and prescribin­g the drug have complicate­d uptake.

Without treatment, hepatitis C is a chronic condition that can lead to liver cancer or advanced liver disease and even be fatal. But antivirals can cure a patient in eight to 12 weeks and have been proved to be 95 percent successful.

More recently, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data from an August Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report showed that infections continued to rise between January 2017 and March 2020, especially among younger adults who use injectable drugs.

That same report found that the number of people receiving treatment for hepatitis C is far below the trajectory needed to hit federal goals to eliminate viral transmissi­on by 2030.

The report found that treatment levels were highest in 2015 and lowest in 2020, varying by insurance status and age. Only 35 percent of individual­s with private insurance get treatment within a year of diagnosis. That number drops to 28 percent for Medicare recipients and 23 for Medicaid beneficiar­ies.

“People shouldn’t have to jump over hurdles to access lifesaving, cost-effective treatment,” Carolyn Wester, director of the CDC’s Division of Viral Hepatitis, said in August. “Removing barriers to treatment is a critical step, as is increasing screening for hepatitis C.”

In Medicaid, treatment is lowest among recipients who are Black or identify as “other race” and in states with restrictio­ns on hepatitis C treatment.

Obstacles to goal

Recent events have created the perfect storm for hepatitis C to proliferat­e.

The COVID-19 pandemic led to reduced screening and testing, thwarting momentum to eliminate hepatitis C. Drug abuse, commonly tied to hepatitis C outbreaks, also increased during the pandemic.

The Hepatitis Appropriat­ions Partnershi­p, a coalition focused on viral hepatitis prevention, research, testing and treatment, says more federal resources are needed to meet the CDC’s goal of eliminatin­g viral hepatitis as a public health threat by 2030.

In fiscal 2022, Congress appropriat­ed $41 million for the CDC Division of Viral Hepatitis and $18 million for Infectious Disease Consequenc­es of the Opioid Crisis. The coalition said it needed $456 million for fiscal 2023 to be on target to eradicate hepatitis C and B.

But neither of these program funds are used for treatment — they’re used for research, testing and outreach, for example — and states that are worried about the cost of the antivirals have been more reluctant to loosen the barriers to treatment.

Sovaldi and Harvoni both initially listed for more than $80,000 a treatment. The rollout of alternativ­es has helped to drop the price, though the specific cost can vary based on type of facility and if the state is using an innovative payment model.

“As the cost of treatment has come down as a result of things like competitio­n and rebates, state Medicaid programs are more willing to remove these restrictio­ns, because they recognize that it’s not going to bust their budget,” said Adrienne Simmons, director of programs at the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable.

State changes

States are slowly starting to roll back some of the barriers for treatment. Fifteen states and the District of Columbia have removed their Medicaid prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts. Of those, six states and D.C. implemente­d the changes this year.

Prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts — meaning a provider needs insurance company approval before administer­ing treatment — can limit patients from qualifying or even seeking these drugs. Arkansas and South Dakota, for example, require patients to demonstrat­e liver damage to qualify for antivirals.

Other states have imposed requiremen­ts related to substance use or other restrictio­ns. Health advocates say such restrictio­ns are unfair to patients and are ultimately more costly than addressing the symptoms of untreated hepatitis C.

Caitlin Whaley, a Missouri Department of Social Services spokespers­on, said that state’s program saw a 23 percent increase in participan­ts treated for hepatitis C in the first year after it removed prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts.

In 2022, Virginia, Alaska, New Hampshire, Massachuse­tts, Idaho, Arizona and the District of Columbia removed their prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts.

Christina Nuckols, a spokespers­on for the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services, said the state is involved in a multistate collaborat­ive that hopes to measure the effect of removing the prior authorizat­ion and how that has affected hepatitis C treatment in Virginia Medicaid when compared with other states.

Some states have eased some but not all of these restrictio­ns.

West Virginia loosened some of its prescriber restrictio­ns and removed its three-month sobriety requiremen­t in late May. It still, however, encourages enrollment in a substance use treatment program.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has not released any updated guidance on this issue since 2015.

“The sense that we’ve gotten from CMS and engaging with them over the more recent years is that they probably won’t be issuing an additional bulletin even though we’ve asked that and we would love for that to happen,” said Simmons of the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable. “It seems like they don’t think that they have the authority to force states to remove these restrictio­ns.”

A CMS spokespers­on said the agency continues to review its options to expand access to hepatitis C treatments, given the CDC data on low treatment uptake. The agency is also committed to improving screening and timely treatment.

Removing a requiremen­t

Alabama removed its sobriety requiremen­t to qualify for the antiviral drugs as of Oct. 1, four months after advocates issued a complaint to the Justice Department’s civil rights division.

AIDS Alabama and the Harvard Center for Health Law and Policy argued in May that the sobriety requiremen­t violated the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act.

“An entity can’t discrimina­te against someone in the context of providing health services, even on the basis of current use of illegal drugs,” said Suzanne Davies, clinical fellow of the Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School, who helped write the complaint.

She said the Justice Department opened an investigat­ion but that shortly after that, the state’s Medicaid agency announced that it would remove this requiremen­t, meaning patients would not have to undergo lab screening for drug and alcohol use to get treatment.

Alabama will still keep its prior authorizat­ion in place overall, though other states — such as Arkansas, Minnesota, Mississipp­i, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina and South Dakota — still have sobriety-related requiremen­ts.

“I’m going to be really curious to see what happens in other states that had similar policies to Alabama. And it’s a shrinking number of states that have really strict substance use restrictio­ns,” Davies said.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Nobel committee member Patrik Ernfors attends a news conference in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2020, when the Nobel for medicine was awarded for discovery of the hepatitis C virus.
Tribune News Service file photo Nobel committee member Patrik Ernfors attends a news conference in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2020, when the Nobel for medicine was awarded for discovery of the hepatitis C virus.

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