| Literature DB >> 30182282 |
Maria C Leoni1,2, Andrew Ustianowski3,4, Hamzah Farooq3, Joop E Arends5.
Abstract
Elimination of the three blood-borne viruses-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C (HCV)-as public health issues may be plausible in the near future. Spectacular advances have been made with the introduction of highly effective antiviral agents into clinical practice, and prevention strategies are available for all three infections. Effective disease control, laid out by WHO global strategies, is currently feasible for all three viruses. However, for worldwide elimination of these viruses, effective vaccines are required that are currently only available for HBV. In this review differences and parallels among HIV, HCV and HBV will be discussed with a focus on virologic and therapeutic issues, and prospects for the future of HBV will be presented.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral therapy; Elimination; HIV virus; Hepatitis B virus; Hepatitis C virus; Vaccination
Year: 2018 PMID: 30182282 PMCID: PMC6249183 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-018-0210-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Phases of HBV infection adapted from previous EASL [11] and AASLD Guidelines [12]
| Phase | ALT | HBV DNA | HBeAg | Liver histology | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EASL | AASLD | EASL | AASLD | EASL | AASLD | EASL | AASLD | |
| Immune-tolerant | Normal | Normal | > 2000 < 20,000 IU/ml | > 1 million IU/ml | Positive | Positive | Nil-minimal liver parenchymal damage | Minimal inflammation or fibrosis |
| Immune active | Elevated | Elevated | > 20,000 IU/ml | ≥ 20,000 IU/ml | Positive ± anti-Hbe | Positive | Active liver parenchymal damage | Moderate to severe inflammation or fibrosis |
| Inactive CHB | Normal | Normal | < 2000 IU/ml | < 2000 IU/ml | Positive ± anti-Hbe | Negative | Nil-minimal liver parenchymal damage | Minimal necroinflammation but variable fibrosis |
| Late reactivation | Elevated | Elevated | High | ≥ 2000 IU/ml | Negative + anti-Hbe | Negative | Active liver parenchymal damage | Moderate to severe inflammation or fibrosis |
Current EASL Guidelines (2017) [76]
| Phase | sAg | eAg | HBV DNA | ALT | Liver disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| eAg-positive chronic infection | High | Positive | > 107 IU/ml | Normal | None/minimal |
| eAg-positive chronic hepatitis | High/intermediate | Positive | 104–107 IU/ml | Elevated | Moderate/severe |
| eAg-negative chronic infection | Low | Negative | < 2000 IU/ml | Normal | None |
| eAg-negative chronic infection | Intermediate | Negative | > 2000 IU/ml | Elevated | Moderate/severe |
UNAIDS strategy 2016–2021 and WHO targets 2030 based on the total number of 36.7 million people living with HIV worldwide in 2016 according to WHO
| Indicators | Global burden | Target 2020 | Target 2030 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PMTCT | Mother treatment | 76% Pregnant women on ARV | No infection among children | |
| Incidence | No. of new infection/year | 1.8 million (2016) | < 500,000 | < 200,000 |
| Mortality | No. of people dying from HIV | 1 million | < 500.000 | < 400.000 |
| Testing service | No. of people aware of HIV status | 25.5 million | 90% | |
| Treatment | HIV diagnosed on treatment | 19.5 million | Ca 30 million (90%) | Ca 33 million |
| Efficacy of treatment | HIV viral load undetectable | 16 million | 90% |
PMTC prevention mother-to-child transmission
Hepatitis B and C WHO targets for elimination
| Intervention | Indicators | Global | Targets | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | 2020 | 2030 | ||
| HBV vaccination | HepB3 coverage | 84% | 90% | 90% |
| HBV PMTCT | Hep vaccine birth dose coverage | 39% | 50% | 90% |
| Blood safety | Donation screening | 97% | 95% | 100% |
| Injection safety | Proportion of unsafe injection | 5% | 0 | 0 |
| Harm reduction | Syringes/needles distributed/PWID/year | 27 | 200 | 300 |
| Testing | People aware of HBV status People aware of HCV status | 9% 20% | 30% 30% | 90% 90% |
| Treatment | Diagnoses with HBV on treatment Diagnosed with HCV started on treatment | 8% 7% | 80% 80% | |
HBV hepatitis B virus, HepB3 hepatitis B 3 doses vaccine, PWID people who inject drugs, HCV hepatitis C virus, PMTCT prevention mother-to-child transmission
Current available tools for prevention and treatment of HIV, HBV HCV
| Vaccination | Preventive strategies | Antiviral treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HIV | No | Safe sex Screening and treat pregnant woman (PMTCT) PreP, PEP Early treatment | Lifelong and chronic treatment |
| HBV | Effective vaccine | Screening blood Safe sex Active and passive immunization at birth Vaccination | Lifelong and chronic treatment |
| HCV | No | Harm reductiona Safe sex for MSM Treat acute infection | Short-term and curative treatment |
PreP pre-exposure prophylaxis, PEP post-exposure prophylaxis, PMTCT prevent mother-to-child transmission
aNeedle and syringe programs (NSP) and opiate substitution treatment (OST)