Hepatitis C Treatment as Prevention of Viral Transmission and Liver-Related Morbidity in Persons Who Inject Drugs
Authored by Anthony Cousien, Viet Chi Tran, Sylvie Deuffic-Burban, Marie Jauffret-Roustide, Jean-Stephane Dhersin, Yazdan Yazdanpanah
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/hep.28227
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
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Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) seroprevalence remains high in people who inject
drug (PWID) populations, often above 60\%. Highly effective
direct-acting antiviral (DAA) regimens (90\% efficacy) are becoming
available for HCV treatment. This therapeutic revolution raises the
possibility of eliminating HCV from this population. However, for this, an effective cascade of care is required. In the context of the
available DAA therapies, we used a dynamic individual-based model
including a model of the PWID social network to simulate the impact of
improved testing, linkage to care, and adherence to treatment, and of
modified treatment recommendation on the transmission and on the
morbidity of HCV in PWID in France. Under the current incidence and
cascade of care, with treatment initiated at fibrosis stage >= F2, HCV
prevalence decreased from 42.8\% to 24.9\% (95\% confidence interval:
24.8-24.9) after 10 years. Changing treatment initiation criteria to
treat from F0 was the only intervention leading to a substantial
additional decrease in prevalence, which fell to 11.6\% (95\% CI:
11.6-11.7) at 10 years. Combining this change with improved testing, linkage to care, and adherence to treatment decreased HCV prevalence to
7.0\% (95\% CI: 7.0-7.1) at 10 years and avoided 15\% (95\% CI: 14-17)
and 29\% (95\% CI: 28-30) of cirrhosis complications over 10 and 40
years, respectively. Conclusions: Major decreases in prevalent HCV
infections occur only when treatment is initiated at early stages of
fibrosis, suggesting that systematic treatment in PWID, where incidence
remains high, would be beneficial. However, elimination within the 10
next years will be difficult to achieve using treatment alone, even with
a highly improved cascade of care.
Tags
Epidemiology
Virus-infection
People
Users
Cohort
Fibrosis progression
Meta-regression
Chronic hcv
Sofosbuvir
Abt-450/r-ombitasvir