The Mercury News

Fewer Medi-Cal patients receive crucial treatment for hepatitis C

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

Fewer people have gotten crucial medication for hepatitis C under Medi-Cal in recent years, troubling advocates who have pushed to expand the lifesaving treatment.

Hepatitis C, a slow-moving virus that can lead to liver cancer, cirrhosis and death, can now be cured in most cases with a few months of direct-acting antiviral medication. California has taken steps to dismantle barriers to obtaining the pills under Medi-Cal, the California Medicaid program, including eliminatin­g requiremen­ts for prior authorizat­ion.

Yet the number of MediCal patients getting the medication­s annually plunged more than 40% between fiscal years 201819 and 2020-21, according to data provided to the Los Angeles Times by the California Department of Health Care Services. The number remained flat the following year, hovering around 5,500 patients, and appears to have begun to rebound in this budget year.

State officials could not definitive­ly say why that had happened, but said the drop was consistent with national trends during the COVID-19 pandemic, as fewer people got tested for the virus and many patients avoided health care.

The California Department of Public Health also said that as time has passed since the newer, more effective medication­s for hepatitis C became available, clinicians have reported that the easier-to-reach patients may have already been treated, and “those who remain untreated are those with the most barriers to treatment.”

The Department of Health Care Services, which administer­s Medi-Cal, said it is continuing to review data “to better understand potential barriers to care.”

DHCS “understand­s timely initiation of treatment is critical to reduce mortality, disparitie­s and transmissi­on, and will continue to provide education and outreach to Medi-Cal providers on available treatment options to encourage improving treatment rates for Medi-Cal patients,” it said.

It is unclear exactly how many Medi-Cal patients might be going without the needed treatment, DHCS said. In the past, researcher­s have estimated that more than 300,000 people are living with hepatitis C in California, and a state report found more than 35,000 cases of chronic hepatitis C were newly reported in 2018.

Those statewide figures are not limited to MediCal enrollees, who are estimated to make up roughly one-third of the state population. But in light of those numbers, some experts were disappoint­ed to see fewer than 6,000 patients in the Medi-Cal program getting the direct-acting antiviral medication­s annually in recent years.

“We're just not treating enough people,” said Dr. Christian Ramers, an infectious disease specialist and chief of population health at Family Health Centers of San Diego. He faulted gaps in testing, connecting people to treatment and having enough clinicians providing the care. “There has just not been a real, concerted effort to make hepatitis C treatment an easily accessible part of primary care.”

Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, clinical professor of medicine, population and public health sciences at Keck School of Medicine of USC, lamented that “we never set up the approach with hepatitis C like we have for other infectious diseases, where we reached out to people to make sure they get treated. … Someone untreated with hepatitis is at risk for spreading hepatitis to other people.”

Only a fraction of people infected with hepatitis C promptly start treatment in the United States, researcher­s have found. Many are unaware that they have it. Experts have faulted barriers in some insurance programs, scant investment by public agencies, complicati­ons in the process for obtaining the medication, and hesitancy among primary care physicians, among other obstacles.

“California has been very proactive in reducing barriers. … From an insurance perspectiv­e, there's really no reason why people shouldn't be getting treated” under Medi-Cal, said Dr. Prabhu Gounder, medical director of the viral hepatitis and respirator­y diseases unit at the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. Instead, “it's these other issues.”

Anne Donnelly, co-chair of the California Hepatitis Alliance, said that “we're seeing the most dramatic new increases in people with a lot of barriers to reaching health care,” including people who use drugs, who can be infected through shared needles. “It's very, very difficult to reach people with the limited resources that we have in hepatitis C.”

The California Department of Public Health said it is funding 22 local health jurisdicti­ons to offer testing, treatment and other services for the most vulnerable and underserve­d patients with hepatitis C, including in “non-traditiona­l settings” such as drug treatment programs, mobile health vans, street outreach and syringe services programs. The department has also been promoting routine, opt-out testing for hepatitis C and other viral illnesses in emergency department­s, to make sure that more people know their status and get treatment.

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