| Literature DB >> 30288322 |
Ludmila Maistat1, Natalija Kravchenko1, Amulya Reddy2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The 16 countries of the Eastern Europe and Central Asia (EECA) region are home to 6.6 million people in need of treatment for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Because of transformational change in HCV treatment, global efforts to address HCV are accelerating. Given its large regional burden, the EECA needs to ensure its inclusion in and benefit from any new developments.Entities:
Keywords: Access to treatment; Civil society; Direct-acting antivirals; Eastern Europe and Central Asia; Hepatitis C; Treatment; Vulnerable groups
Year: 2017 PMID: 30288322 PMCID: PMC6171005 DOI: 10.1186/s41124-017-0026-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Med Policy ISSN: 2059-5166
HCV prevalence data by country
| Country (2016 total population) | National anti-HCV prevalence estimate (%) | Adult anti-HCV prevalence Gower, et al. (%) | Estimated number of anti-HCV+ people | Estimated anti-HCV prevalence among PWID (%) | Estimated anti-HCV prevalence among PLHIV (%) | Key populations specified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armenia (2994400) | 4 | 120,000 | 52.1 | 17.9 | Migrants, PWID | |
| Azerbaijan (9705600) | 3.2 | 3.1 | 300,800 | 62.8 | 5.9 | PWID |
| Belarus (9498700) | 2–3 | 1.3 | 250,000 | 70–95 | PWID | |
| Georgia (3720400) | 7.5 | 208,800 | 57–74 | 4.8 | PWID, MSM, healthcare workers | |
| Kazakhstan (17753200) | 1.5–3 | 3.3 | 255,000–510,000 | % not available (estimated 6049 people) | 4.5 | |
| Kyrgyzstan (6019500) | 4 | 2.5 | 220,000 | 45.2 | 80 | |
| Moldova (3553100) | 1.7–4 | 4.5 | 60,000–142,000 | 35.3–65.4 | 4.6 | PWID |
| Russia (146544710) | 4 | 4.1 | 5,900,000 | 69 | 27 | PWID |
| Tajikistan (8547000) | 2.3 | 3.1 | 200,000 | 22.7–49.3 | 25.6% among HIV+ PWID | PWID |
| Ukraine (42708647) | 5 | 2,135,000 | 55 | PWID; hemophiliacs, hemodialysis patients; MSM; PMTCT clients | ||
| Uzbekistan (31575300) | 6.5 | 1,800,000 | 36 | Healthcare workers, PWID, patients receiving invasive treatment |
Direct-acting antiviral drug registration in surveyed countries (September 2016)
| Country | sofosbuvir | sofosbuvir generic | sofosbuvir/ ledipasvir | sofosbuvir/ ledipasvir generic | daclatasvir | daclatasvir generic | ombitasvir/ paritaprevir/ ritonavir/ dasabuvir (Viekira Pak) | ombitasvir/ paritaprevir/ ritonavir | dasabuvir | simeprevir | asunaprevir | narlaprevir | boceprivir | telaprevir |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armenia | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||||
| Azerbaijan | Yes | pending | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||
| Belarus | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| Georgia | Yes | Yes | pending | Yes | Yes | |||||||||
| Kazakhstan | pending | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||
| Kyrgyzstan | Yes | Yes | Yes | pending | ||||||||||
| Moldova | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||||||
| Russia | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||||
| Tajikistan | Yes | |||||||||||||
| Ukraine | Yes | Yes | Yes | pending | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
| Uzbekistan | Yes | humanitarian | Yes |
Lowest direct-acting antiviral drug prices in surveyed countries - USD per 12-week course (September 2016)
| Country | sofosbuvir generic | sofosbuvir generic ‘buyers’ club’ | ombitasvir/ paritaprevir/ dasabuvir/ ritonavir | simeprevir | daclatasvir | asunaprevir |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azerbaijan | 1011 | 15,000 | 7200 | |||
| Belarus | 465 | 16,749 | ||||
| Kyrgyzstan | 780 | |||||
| Russia | 360 | 13,770 | 9840 | 5556 | 558 | |
| Ukraine | 2805 | 465 | ||||
| Uzbekistan | 825 | 390 |
Civil society organization HCV activity summary
| Category | Activities | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness raising | National campaigns to inform decision makers and the general public | Patient ‘schools’ on access to treatment and other HCV issues | Media notices on HCV | Educational videos |
| Mobilization | Establishing networks of individuals and organizations to advocate HCV issues | Implementing letter writing/petition signing campaigns, e.g. a ‘Treatment Waiting List’ and lower price requests to pharmaceutical companies | Organizing research and reporting on HCV needs | Organizing CSOs to meet with pharmaceutical companies |
| Advocacy | Encouraging national treatment programs and guideline development | Organizing campaigns aiming to bring about favorable policy and response from governments, industry and donors | Negotiating lower prices with pharmaceutical companies | Specific opposition to pharmaceutical patent applications and support for alternate licensing |
| Testing and treatment | Conducting screening test campaigns to identify HCV- antibody positive people (that also raise awareness and provide evidence for advocacy) | Implementing treatment programs integrated into existing services, particularly for the disproportionately affected/marginalized, e.g. PWID | Seeking donor funding for expanded treatment programs using updated protocols | Providing community-level and technical input on national program planning and guideline committees |
EECA Civil Society Involvement in HCV Work
Selected civil society organization HCV activity examples
| Category | Activity | Organization(s) involved | Results and/or comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness raising | National campaign using mass media and celebrities in Georgia | Concerted effort by Georgian Harm Reduction Network, OSF Georgia, Georgia CAB, Medecins du Monde, Hepa+, New Vector and others | Large-scale treatment program implemented |
| “Demand treatment!” campaign in Ukraine | Concerted effort of 90 CSOs led by Alliance for Public Health | Community-level HCV screening to document prevalence; subsequent national and regionally/locally-funded HCV treatment programs | |
| Mobilization | HCV advocacy and policy brief research and dissemination in 11 countries | Eurasian Harm Reduction Network; Kyrgyz Harm Reduction Network; Andrey Rylkov Foundation (Russia; Treatment Preparedness Coalition (Russia); Alliance for Public Health | Evidence compiled for awareness-raising and advocacy activities |
| Drug registration, pricing, clinical trial and early access issue negotiation at EECA level | EECACommunity Adivsory Board meetings addressing AbbVie, BMS, Gilead, Janssen and Merck Sharp & Dohme | Inclusion of simeprevir on the Russian “List of Vital and Essential Medicines” and removal of telapravir, which was included due to industry price reduction (market segmentation) despite being obsolete | |
| Advocacy | DAA price reduction negotiation in Ukraine | Alliance for Public Health | USD 750 for a 12-week sofosbuvir course; USD 900 for a 12-week sofosbuvir/ledipasvir course |
| National treatment guideline modification and program endorsement advocacy neogtiations | Inclusion of DAAs in national treatment guidelines and establishment of a national and over 15 regional treatment programs; government procurement of sofosbuvir | ||
| Testing and treatment | HCV treatment for HIV-HCV coinfected PWID implementation in harm reduction programs in Ukraine | Alliance for Public Health | Global Fund support and DAAprice reduction (above) obtained |
| Contribution to national HCV guideline development/revision and strategic planning | Multiple CSOs inAzerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova and Ukraine | Supports appropriate policy and program implementation |
Recommendations for stakeholders
| Based on this survey, we recommend that CSOs: |
| • conduct HCV epidemiology studies in key populations; |
| • integrate HCV services in PWID and PLHIV programs; |
| • monitor PWID access to HCV treatment; document, disseminate and, if appropriate, pursue legal and media options for any cases of service denial; |
| • advocate for inclusion of PWID in national HCV guidelines and programs; |
| • advocate for HCV medication price reductions through stakeholders and the media; |
| • monitor the drug registration landscape and maintain pressure on pharmaceutical companies and governments for prompt registration of new drugs; |
| • partner with international organizations to oppose barriers and leverage TRIPS flexibilities; |
| • work with governments on regulatory measures to ensure lower prices for generics; |
| • advocate for government disclosure of prices, purchase volumes and relevant treatment program details to allow independent expert evaluation; |
| • participate on national HCV program advisory committees; |
| • participate in advocacy related to keeping WHO guidelines updated; |
| • include HCV testing and treatment in project proposals, with focus on key populations but also considering the general population; |
| • document and disseminate CSO-led HCV program best practices. |