key: cord-0844647-01tw9qqq authors: Tatara, Eric; Gutfraind, Alexander; Collier, Nicholson T.; Echevarria, Desarae; Cotler, Scott J.; Major, Marian E.; Ozik, Jonathan; Dahari, Harel; Boodram, Basmattee title: Modeling hepatitis C micro-elimination among people who inject drugs with direct-acting antivirals in metropolitan Chicago date: 2022-03-10 journal: PLoS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264983 sha: 0b2cd07cb208a1da8b8692e3b643060d2a554824 doc_id: 844647 cord_uid: 01tw9qqq Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and mortality worldwide. Direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy leads to high cure rates. However, persons who inject drugs (PWID) are at risk for reinfection after cure and may require multiple DAA treatments to reach the World Health Organization’s (WHO) goal of HCV elimination by 2030. Using an agent-based model (ABM) that accounts for the complex interplay of demographic factors, risk behaviors, social networks, and geographic location for HCV transmission among PWID, we examined the combination(s) of DAA enrollment (2.5%, 5%, 7.5%, 10%), adherence (60%, 70%, 80%, 90%) and frequency of DAA treatment courses needed to achieve the WHO’s goal of reducing incident chronic infections by 90% by 2030 among a large population of PWID from Chicago, IL and surrounding suburbs. We also estimated the economic DAA costs associated with each scenario. Our results indicate that a DAA treatment rate of >7.5% per year with 90% adherence results in 75% of enrolled PWID requiring only a single DAA course; however 19% would require 2 courses, 5%, 3 courses and <2%, 4 courses, with an overall DAA cost of $325 million to achieve the WHO goal in metropolitan Chicago. We estimate a 28% increase in the overall DAA cost under low adherence (70%) compared to high adherence (90%). Our modeling results have important public health implications for HCV elimination among U.S. PWID. Using a range of feasible treatment enrollment and adherence rates, we report robust findings supporting the need to address re-exposure and reinfection among PWID to reduce HCV incidence. a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and mortality worldwide. Globally, an estimated 71 million people have chronic HCV infection, with an estimated 2.4 million in the United States [1] , where the primary mode of HCV transmission is sharing syringes and other equipment among people who inject drugs (PWID). Fueled by the opioid epidemic, HCV incidence is rising, with 57,500 new cases in 2019 alone, a 63% increase from 2015 [2] . Access to and uptake of highly efficacious direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) for U. S. PWID remains low despite evidence supporting PWID can be successfully treated for HCV with sustained virologic response (SVR) similar to non-PWID [3] . Moreover, data from recent studies have shown that DAA therapy does not increase injection risk behaviors among PWID [4] [5] [6] ; paradoxically, high uptake of DAA is expected to increase HCV incidence initially even with stable or decreased risk behaviors due to a temporary increase in the pool of PWID susceptible to reinfection [7] . DAA treatment is critical to achieving the World Health Organization's (WHO) goal of reducing incident chronic infections by 90% by 2030 [8] . As such, the effectiveness of treatment strategies on incidence should consider the impact of reinfection in PWID [9] , particularly since drug use often spans decades with periods of temporary cessation [10] . Complex models that account for the effectiveness of DAAs on reducing new chronic HCV infections among PWID as well as the interplay of sociodemographic factors, risk behaviors and practices, social networks, and geographic location are needed to inform development of effective elimination strategies [11] . A recent review by Pitcher et al. [12] , that includes more than 60 mathematical modeling papers, has provided some insight into HCV elimination strategies among PWID. In several studies, treatment was restricted to only once among PWID who failed to reach cure after DAA therapy [13, 14] . In particular, while Scott et al. [15] emphasized the importance of unrestricted treatment frequency, none of the previous modeling studies were designed to predict in detail the frequency of retreatment, the impact of retreatment on DAA cost, or the effect of treatment adherence on achieving the WHO goal. A micro-elimination approach [16] , which entails pursuing eliminations goals in discrete populations at high risk for transmitting HCV such as PWID, has been suggested as a less daunting approach that could build momentum by generating small victories towards achieving the WHO global HCV elimination goal. Even within the U.S., the PWID population is heterogeneous as evidenced by geographic differences in HCV incidence and prevalence [2, 17] . Using an agent-based model (ABM) approach, we focus on HCV micro-elimination among PWID in a targeted geographic region, metropolitan Chicago, Illinois (city of Chicago, Illinois and its surrounding suburban areas that encompass multiple counties) by examining the combination(s) of DAA enrollment (2.5%, 5%, 7.5%, 10%), adherence (60%, 70%, 80%, 90%) and number of treatments (1 to 4) needed to achieve the WHO's goal of reducing incident chronic infections by 90% by 2030 [18] . We also estimated DAA costs associated with each scenario. We extended our previous work [18, 19] on simulating the PWID population in metropolitan Chicago, including the social interactions that result in HCV infection, to develop our Hepatitis C Elimination in PWID (HepCEP). The PWID population of metropolitan Chicago is heterogeneous and well-studied [20] . Details on the generation of the synthetic population was previously described [19] (S1 Table) . In brief, parameter estimates were generated to profile each of the estimated 32,000 PWID [21] residing in metropolitan Chicago represented in the synthetic population [CNEP+] from analyses of two empirical datasets. These were the (i) 2009 metropolitan Chicago PWID data from the CDC-sponsored National HIV Behavioral Surveillance survey [22] of 545 PWID [NHBS 2009 ] and (ii) 2006-2013 data from a large, multi-site syringe service program (SSP) of >6,000 participants [20] [CNEP] (Fig 1) . Table 1 summarizes select attributes of the synthetic population, which mirrors some of the national pattern of PWID subgroups with the fastest increase in HCV incidence, including <30 years old and non-Hispanic white [2] . While national data and studies have shown large increases in HCV among non-urban populations, most of these focus on rural geographic areas. Our synthetic population includes under-studied suburban PWID, who comprise an estimated 54% of the metropolitan Chicago PWID population ( Table 1) . Suburban PWID present unique challenges to HCV elimination, including high levels of mobility between areas of high (Chicago) and low (suburb) HCV incidence areas and dispersed networks [23, 24] . The metropolitan Chicago model geography is defined by zones based on the 2010 US Census ZIP code level data. Geographic locations of importance to PWID (residence, known drug market locations) from the two empirical datasets used to generate the synthetic population were embedded into the metropolitan Chicago geographic environment. Syringe-sharing was modeled as the primary mode of HCV transmission and PWID were connected via syringe- Schematic diagram of the Hepatitis C Elimination in PWID (HepCEP) model. The initial synthetic model population is generated from the CNEP+ dataset and linked in a syringe-sharing network. After the model burn-in period of 365 days, the main model loop begins and each individual PWID agent executes their step behavior that in turn simulates the HCV infection dynamics. PWID who have completed a successful treatment will return to either the NAÏVE or RECOVERED state depending on if they have previously recovered from an acute infection. When a PWID is cured, the model uses a CURED state but remembers past RECOVERED state or past NAÏVE state and returns the PWID to the respective state after treatment. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264983.g001 sharing networks (Fig 2) . Network formation was determined by the probability of two persons encountering each other in their neighborhood of residence or within known drug market areas in Chicago, Illinois that attract both urban and non-urban PWID for drug purchasing and utilization of SSPs that are also located in the same areas [23] . The methods used to calculate network encounter rates, establishment processes, and removal of networks are detailed in [19] . Each individual has a predetermined number of in-network PWID partners who give syringes to the individual and out-network predetermined PWID partners who receive syringes from the individual, which drives the direction of HCV transmission. The network is dynamic, and during the course of simulation some ties may be lost, while new connections form, resulting in an approximately constant network size. PWID agents can leave the model population either due to age-dependent death or permanent drug use cessation and are replaced with new agents sampled from the input data set to maintain a nearly constant population size of 32,000 for the entire course of the simulation. The annual turnover rate of the population is about 2% (S1 Table) . Two empirical datasets were obtained on metropolitan Chicago PWID to validate HepCEP. The 2012 NHBS Chicago PWID subset, the most representative data available at the time, was used to construct a synthetic population to validate HCV prevalence for 2012 (Fig 1) . The previous validation results show high concordance, i.e., the predicted and actual values match within 2% overall for HCV prevalence. Similarly, data from a 2012-13 network and geographic study [25] of 164 PWID ages 18-30 and their drug-using network members, was used to calibrate and validate the network formation process. The simulated and actual networks match closely with an average error of 1.3% [19] . Treatment enrollment was modelled as (unbiased) random sampling of chronically infected PWID and the annual target enrollment rate, defined as the total annual treatment enrollment as a fraction of the total population, was a model parameter with a conservative range of 2.5-10%. DAA treatment success probability was a function of the treatment adherence and SVR parameters. While recently reported SVR rates are close to 99% [26] [27] [28] in many populations, we used a conservative estimate for SVR rates for U.S. PWID of 90%. The treatment adherence parameter was varied between 60%-90% to encompass the combined effects of behavioral, drug use and social factors that affect treatment completion (e.g., lost to follow-up, missed doses, enrollment in medication-assisted therapy, mobility) reported in the literature [23, [29] [30] [31] [32] . Treatment re-enrollment(s) was allowed for PWID who successfully completed treatment and became re-infected. We assumed that successful treatments did not affect the probability of subsequent re-infections [7] . The total PWID target enrollment for a single day was determined by the daily mean treatment enrollment, which is the total PWID population multiplied by the annual treatment enrollment parameter / 365. The daily enrollment target was sampled from a Poisson distribution using the daily mean treatment enrollment. Other measures include treatment duration (12 weeks) and DAA cost ($25,000 [USD] per treatment) [33] . To examine the impact of DAA retreatments, we conducted a series of 80 different scenarios to account for all combinations of enrollment rate (2.5%, 5%, 7.5%, 10%), adherence (treatment completion) (60%, 70%, 80%, 90%), and a number of DAA treatment courses (e.g., 1-4; initial and three retreatments in response to up to four separate infections). For each of the 80 scenarios, 20 stochastic replicates were run in order to sufficiently capture variance in the model's output, for a total of 1,600 simulations. As such, we examined the impact of three retreatments after achieving cure or not achieving SVR after the treatment of the initial infection was performed to allow for examination of a retreatment policy that reflects reinfection frequency among PWID reported in published studies [34] . Although in clinical practice the number of DAA retreatments may be limited, to illustrate potential value of unconstrained retreatment policy on incidence, we also examined a scenario without re-treatment restrictions among those with reinfection and/or failed SVR. The ABM simulation start date of 2010 was selected based on the PWID demographic data from multiple surveys in previous years [19] . The model time step was one day, and treatment enrollment was started in year 2020 and ran until year 2030, with detailed model data collected on daily intervals. We report the mean annual incidence of chronic HCV relative to the mean baseline incidence rate in year 2020 with no treatment (enrollment rate of 0%). Each individual PWID agent steps through his current activity on each simulation day and transition between activities was dependent on the agent's current state (e.g. infected) and the scheduled duration of each activity. The model Initialization and PWID agent behavior logic are shown in Fig 1. At the start of each simulation run, the initial synthetic model population is generated from the CNEP+ dataset and linked in a syringe-sharing network. The model is run with a "burn-in" period of 365 days used to stabilize the PWID network connectivity such that the number of syringe-sharing partners for each PWID converges to the predefined number of partners. After burn-in, the main model loop begins and each individual PWID agent executes his step behavior, which in turn simulates the HCV infection dynamics (Fig 1) . Naïve PWID who are exposed to infected partners may develop a primary acute infection, which can either spontaneously clear or progress into a chronic infection (S1 Table) . Recovered PWID who are again exposed to infected partners can be re-infected, and secondary acute infections can also clear or progress to a chronic infection (Fig 1) . PWID who have completed a successful treatment will return to either the Naïve or Recovered state depending on whether they have previously recovered from an acute infection (Fig 1) . When a PWID is cured, the model uses a Cured state but remembers past Recovered state or past Naïve state and returns the PWID to the respective state after treatment. PWID who are Naïve and have never been in the Recovered state and who become infected enter the primary Acute stage and have a 65-88% chance (depending on gender) of entering the Chronic state, otherwise they enter the Recovered state [19] . PWID who are secondary Acute have previously been in the Recovered state (at any time) have an 85% chance of clearing and returning to the Recovered state, and 15% chance of becoming Chronic [19] (S2 Table) . timeline produced from a real simulation event log for which the total number of treatments is limited to four (i.e. initial and 3 retreatment courses). The frequency and timing of reinfection events is consistent with those reported in the literature for PWID [34, 35] . The HCV-infected agent completes the following sequence (Fig 3) : (i) enrolled in DAA treatment in mid-2020 and successfully cured, (ii) re-infected in 2021, retreated, and remained cured until early 2022, (iii) re-infected in early 2022, followed by a failed treatment in 2022, (iv) re-treated and cured again in late 2023, and (v) re-infected again in early 2024, but remained in the infected state until the end of the simulation in 2030 as the retreatment threshold of total 4 treatment courses (including one failed treatment course) has been exceeded. In the HepCEP model, individual PWID agent treatment can be customized on an individual level, allowing for treatment approaches and constraints to be uniquely set for each person. With the cost of $25,000 per course of DAA treatment, we also estimated the overall DAA cost to achieve the WHO goal among PWID in metropolitan Chicago with select optional scenarios as determined by the study results (e.g., high adherence and up to three retreatments). Simulations were conducted using a high-performance computing workflow implemented with the EMEWS framework [36] . The simulation experiments were executed on the Bebop cluster run by the Laboratory Computing Resource Center at Argonne National Laboratory. Each simulation required approximately one hour of wall time to complete. Using the EMEWS workflow on the Bebop cluster, the actual compute time was also one hour since all runs can execute in parallel on 1,600 processes. Due to the increasing availability of PWID cured with treatment who remain susceptible and can re-acquire HCV, there is a projected increase in incidence during the first 1-3 years after DAA therapy initiation, followed by a transient decline, then convergence to half of the incidence prior to DAA therapy initiation. This pattern does not achieve the WHO goal by year 2030, not even with DAA enrollment rates of up to 10% and treatment adherence of 90% (Fig 4) . Since the WHO goal could not be achieved with a 90% treatment adherence with no Overall, an enrollment rate of �5% with a treatment adherence threshold of �80% would be needed to achieve the WHO target of 90% incidence reduction (Fig 5B and 5C ); as such, an enrollment rate of 7.5% is a conservative lowest enrollment rate for which the WHO goal can be achieved by 2030 assuming an adherence of �70%. A DAA enrollment rate of 10% and a treatment adherence of 90% would achieve the WHO goal the earliest (year 2025, Fig 5C) . As expected, adherence impacts the speed at which the WHO goal is met at lower enrollment rates. Overall, the HCV incidence rate reduction for this scenario demonstrates that the WHO goal is achievable by year 2030 when unrestricted DAA courses are allowed. However, while each PWID could potentially be treated without restriction in the model in this scenario, we show that only a small proportion of PWID require more than three DAA treatments for the duration of the simulation. Table 2 shows the frequency of how many times each PWID is treated using a treatment adherence of 90% (Table 2A) and 70% (Table 2B ) and an enrollment rate of 7.5% when unrestricted DAA courses are allowed. As seen, 75.4% of PWID required only a single treatment and 18.5% of PWID require only two DAA treatments during the simulation period with 90% adherence (Table 2A) , i.e., nearly 94% of all PWID require at most a total of two DAA treatments to meet the WHO goal by year 2030. Even with a treatment adherence of only 70%, nearly 93% of PWID require at most three DAA treatments ( Table 2B ). The frequency of retreatments in Table 2 suggests that, for scenarios in which DAA treatment courses are unrestricted for each PWID, the actual fraction of the treated population requiring more than three treatments is only around 6% even when treatment adherence is low. The incidence curves of new chronic HCV infections when DAA courses are limited to two (Fig 6A-6C ) or three (Fig 6D-6F) are qualitatively similar to those for the unrestricted retreatment scenario in Fig 5 such that the rate of incidence reduction was proportional to the DAA enrollment rate. However, the scenario in which up to two DAA courses are permitted (initial plus one retreatment) predicted that the WHO goal cannot be achieved even with the highest enrollment and adherence rates (Fig 6C) . When increased to three (one initial plus two retreatments), the WHO incidence reduction goal is achievable by year 2030 for DAA enrollment rates � 7.5% and adherence � 80% (Fig 6E and 6F) . As in the two DAA course scenario, the three DAA course scenario exhibits a lower limit on incidence reduction, although the limit approached close to zero for high treatment adherence rates (� 90%) (Fig 6F) . When up to four DAA courses are allowed per PWID (Fig 6G-6I) , the incidence reduction goal was achieved for DAA enrollment rates � 7.5% and adherence � 70%, similar to the no treatment restriction scenario (Fig 5) . This is explained by the very small fraction (<2%) of PWID requiring more than four DAA courses in the no treatment restriction scenario ( Table 2) suggesting that limiting the number of treatments per PWID to four was sufficient to achieve the WHO goal by 2030. Table 3 provides a summary of the DAA treatment frequency for PWID in the up to three and up to four DAA course limit scenarios for low (70% , Table 3B ) and high (90% , Table 3A ) treatment adherence rates with a DAA enrollment rate of 7.5%. In the case of 90% adherence and a DAA enrollment rate of 7.5% with a treatment limit of three times, the model predicted that 74.3% of PWID required only a single treatment and 18.4% of PWID require only two DAA treatments during the simulation period; with a treatment limit of four times, 75.1% of PWID require only a single treatment, and 18.5% of PWID require at most two treatments (Table 3A ). The overall DAA cost to achieve the WHO goal among PWID in metropolitan Chicago with 90% adherence with up to four allowed DAA courses was predicted to be approximately $325.3 million (95% CI: 323.4-327.2, Table 4A ), and nearly the same for restricting to up to three DAA courses ($326.4 million, 95%CI: 324.3-328.6, Table 4A ). In comparison, at 70% adherence with four DAA courses restriction, the model predicted that substantially more DAA treatment courses (9859, 95% CI: 9821-9897, Table 3B ) would be needed to achieve the WHO goal at a 28% increased cost ($417.0 million) ( Table 4B) . The difference is driven by treatment failure affecting the successful completion of the initial treatment (75% vs. 58%), thereby 2-3 times more PWID would need to re-enroll into treatment at the 90% compared to the 70% adherence scenario. The high cost of DAA treatment, challenges to adherence, and reinfection due to continued engagement in injection risk practices pose significant barriers to treatment access, uptake, and completion among PWID. In light of the heterogeneity of the U.S. PWID and variable regional [17] and subpopulation HCV incidence rates [2] , our study aimed to elucidate Table 3 Number treated values are rounded to the nearest integer. Percent treated is the fraction of PWID treated by number of times in each row relative to the total number of all individual PWID treated. The related DAA cost is shown in Table 4 . Entries marked with ( � ) indicates scenario does not achieve WHO incidence elimination goal. multiple pathways to HCV micro-elimination [16] among PWID from metropolitan Chicago with residents from both urban (46%) and suburban (54%) areas surrounding Chicago, Illinois (data not shown) [19] . Using realistic conservative enrollment rates (2.5% to 10%), we simultaneously examined the impact of adherence (70%-90%) and treatment frequency restrictions (unrestricted, <2, <3, <4 DAA courses per PWID) on reaching the WHO goal of reducing incident chronic HCV infection by 90%. Our results indicate that allowing treatment of reinfections is imperative regardless of enrollment and adherence and allowing for up to three DAA courses (Fig 6D-6F) is the minimum needed to achieve micro-elimination of chronic HCV infection incidence in this region. For PWID subpopulations with heightened challenges, e.g., low adherence due to residential transience and high levels of mobility, our study specifies a pathway to achieve the WHO target that includes a modest DAA enrollment rate of 7.5% (75 per 1000 PWID) per year, allowing for DAA treatment frequency of up to four times, and with a treatment adherence rate as low as 70% (Fig 6G-6I) . Total program costs for the scenario with 7.5% enrollment and 90% adherence were larger when multiple DAA courses were allowed compared to the scenario with a single course of treatment with no retreatment ( Table 5) . When retreatment was not considered as an active (Table 5) . However, as shown in our model, limiting DAA courses below three would not achieve the WHO goal for reducing new chronic infections by 2030 (Fig 6) . Total costs between the scenarios that allow three ($326.4 million, 95%CI: 324.3-328.6, Table 5 ) compared to four ($325.3 million, 95% CI: 323.6-327.2, Table 5 ) courses were nearly identical. The counter-intuitive higher mean cost in the three versus four courses scenario can be partly attributed to stochastic variation in the model results, as the 95% CI for total cost overlap. However, perhaps more importantly, Table 5 shows that the total number of infections during the DAA treatment enrollment period actually decreases as the number of allowed DAA courses increases. Limiting DAA treatment to a single course results in a larger pool of infected PWID that may infect other HCV-naïve PWID in their syringe-sharing network. Newly infected individuals would be subsequently enrolled in DAA treatment, incurring additional costs even though the PWID who is the source of the infection would be unable to re-enroll if treatment frequency limitations exist. Our modeling results have important public health implications for HCV micro-elimination among U.S. PWID. Using a range of feasible treatment enrollment and adherence rates, we report robust findings supporting the need to address re-exposure and reinfection among PWID to reduce HCV incidence. Our ABM approach allows us to model PWID at the individual level and examine the effects of social network interactions on syringe-sharing and HCV transmission. In our recent ordinary differential equation (ODE) model study [37] , we predicted that a DAA-treatment rate of 6.4%, with unlimited DAA treatments, and with an SVR rate of 90%, would be needed to reach the WHO elimination goal of 90% reduction of incidence over a 10-year treatment period with a total projected DAA cost of $418 million. This compares to a 7.5% DAA-treatment enrollment, 90% adherence rate using the HepCEP ABM with a lower DAA cost of $326.4 million if up to three DAA courses are allowed (Fig 6D-6F and Table 5 ), which would reach the WHO goal by 2026. The ODE approach does not represent the network structure or spatial and demographic heterogeneity of the PWID population that modulate the transmission risk and, therefore, results in an overestimate of the actual cost needed to reach >90% reduction. As such, our ABM is more suitable than ODE modeling for predicting the effects of any barriers to treatment. Our study has several limitations. First, the model conservatively included both reinfection and unsuccessful treatment (failure to achieve SVR) in the single treatment only scenario (Fig 4) , which effectively inflates the number of treatments needed to meet the WHO incidence goal. However, the WHO goal still cannot be achieved with an enrollment rate of 10% without treating reinfections. Second, our model assumes that PWID's underlying risk behaviors remain constant during the simulation, but patterns of drug use and injection risk practices may change over time (e.g., due to temporary cessation, medication-assisted therapy enrollment, etc.). Third, although 48% of the synthetic population were enrolled in SSP ( Table 1) , such that syringe-sharing and other HCV-related factors associated with SSP enrollment status are accounted for in the model, we did not directly evaluate the impact of scaling up harm reduction services in combination with other parameters. Fourth, DAA treatment was assigned in HepCEP randomly without considering the time and resources needed to screen and linkage to care, which may effectively extend the micro-elimination timeline. Fifth, PWID co-infected with HCV and HIV were not modeled in HepCEP; however, reported HIV prevalence was lowest among Chicago PWID (0.7%) of the 20 U.S. cities reporting to the 2018 NHBS (range 0.7-10.5%) [38] . Moreover, DAA treatment efficacy is reportedly comparable for HIV/HCV coinfected and HCV mono-infected patients [39] [40] [41] . As such, we do not expect HIV/HCV co-infected participants to have a major effect on the current ABM predictions. A recent study suggests that the United States is not on track to meet the WHO goals for HCV elimination by 2030, with 35% of states, including Illinois, running behind by 10 years or more [42] , which might be further delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic [43] . The study estimated an annual number of treatments of 1501-3000 (4.7%-9.4% of the estimated 32,000 PWID in metropolitan Chicago) would be required for Illinois to reach the treatment target for HCV elimination by 2030, which agrees with estimated optimal enrollment rates of >5%-10%. To address the lag in reaching the WHO elimination goals, it is imperative to implement strategies to increase HCV screening, linkage, and adherence to DAAs, and treatment of reinfections among PWID to achieve the WHO goal in high-risk populations. Supporting information S1 Hepatitis C Fact Sheet 2019 Viral Hepatitis Surveillance Report A Call to Action: HCV Treatment of People Who Inject Drugs in the United States Impact of Hepatitis C treatment on behavioural change in relation to drug use in people who inject drugs: A systematic review Changes in risk behaviours during and following treatment for hepatitis C virus infection among people who inject drugs: The ACTIVATE study Injecting risk behaviours following treatment for hepatitis C virus infection among people who inject drugs: The Australian Trial in Acute Hepatitis C HCV elimination among people who inject drugs. Modelling pre-and post-WHO elimination era Combating hepatitis B and C to reach elimination by 2030: advocacy brief Hepatitis C reinfection after successful antiviral treatment among people who inject drugs: A meta-analysis Long-Term Course of Opioid Addiction How to eliminate HCV in people who inject drugs in the USA Mathematical modeling of hepatitis c virus (HCV) prevention among people who inject drugs: A review of the literature and insights for elimination strategies Treatment and primary prevention in people who inject drugs for chronic hepatitis C infection: Is elimination possible in a high prevalence setting? The need for treatment scale-up to impact HCV transmission in people who inject drugs in Montréal, Canada: a modelling study Treatment scale-up to achieve global HCV incidence and mortality elimination targets: a cost-effectiveness model The Micro-Elimination Approach to Eliminating Hepatitis C: Strategic and Operational Considerations Attribution of Hepatitis C Virus Seroconversion Risk in Young Injection Drug Users in 5 US Cities Multi-objective model exploration of hepatitis C elimination in an agent-based model of people who inject drugs Agent-Based Model Forecasts Aging of the Population of People Who Inject Drugs in Metropolitan Chicago and Changing Prevalence of Hepatitis C Infections Needle exchange and injection-related risk behaviors in Chicago: a longitudinal study Trends in the Population Prevalence of People Who Inject Drugs in US Metropolitan Areas Developing an HIV Behavioral Surveillance System for Injecting Drug Users: The National HIV Behavioral Surveillance System High-Risk Geographic Mobility Patterns among Young Urban and Suburban Persons who Inject Drugs and their Injection Network Members Socio-behavioral and geographic correlates of prevalent hepatitis C virus infection among young injection drug users in metropolitan Baltimore and Chicago The role of social networks and geography on risky injection behaviors of young persons who inject drugs Intensive Models of Hepatitis C Care for People Who Inject Drugs Receiving Opioid Agonist Therapy Response to direct-acting antiviral therapy among ongoing drug users and people receiving opioid substitution therapy Real-life glecaprevir/pibrentasvir in a large cohort of patients with hepatitis C virus infection: The MISTRAL study Adherence to Once-daily and Twice-daily Direct-acting Antiviral Therapy for Hepatitis C Infection Among People With Recent Injection Drug Use or Current Opioid Agonist Therapy Outcomes from a large 10 year hepatitis C treatment programme in people who inject drugs: No effect of recent or former injecting drug use on treatment adherence or therapeutic response Facilitators of HCV treatment adherence among people who inject drugs: a systematic qualitative review and implications for scale up of direct acting antivirals Rationale and design of a randomized pragmatic trial of patient-centered models of hepatitis C treatment for people who inject drugs: The HERO study Should we treat acute hepatitis C? A decision and cost-effectiveness analysis Acute Hepatitis C Virus Infection in Young Adult Injection Drug Users: A Prospective Study of Incident Infection, Resolution, and Reinfection Low Hepatitis C Reinfection Following Direct-acting Antiviral Therapy Among People Who Inject Drugs on Opioid Agonist Therapy From desktop to Large-Scale Model Exploration with Swift/T Modeling indicates efficient vaccine-based interventions for the elimination of hepatitis C virus among persons who inject drugs in metropolitan Chicago HIV Infection Risk, Prevention, and Testing Behaviors Among Persons Who Inject Drugs-National HIV Behavioral Surveillance Injection Drug Use, 23 U.S. Cities Natural history and treatment of HCV/HIV coinfection: Is it time to change paradigms? Management of Hepatitis C/HIV Coinfection in the Era of Highly Effective Hepatitis C Virus Direct-Acting Antiviral Therapy High rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) cure using direct-acting antivirals in HIV/HCVcoinfected patients: a real-world perspective Estimating the Year Each State in the United States Will Achieve the World Health Organization's Elimination Targets for Hepatitis C