| Literature DB >> 30288334 |
P A M Kracht1, J E Arends1, K J van Erpecum2, A Urbanus3, J A Willemse4, A I M Hoepelman1, E A Croes5.
Abstract
The Netherlands is striving to achieve national elimination of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) as one of the first countries worldwide. The favorable HCV epidemiology with both low prevalence and incidence, together with access to care and treatment, present excellent conditions to further build on towards this objective. The Dutch national plan on viral hepatitis, introduced in 2016, defines targets in the HCV healthcare cascade and provides a structural framework for the development of elimination activities. Since many different stakeholders are involved in HCV care in the Netherlands, focus has been placed on micro-elimination initiatives as a pragmatic and efficient approach. These numerous micro-eliminations projects have brought the Netherlands closer to HCV elimination. In the near future, efforts specifically have to be made in order to optimize case-finding strategies and to successfully accomplish the nationwide implementation of the registration and monitoring system of viral hepatitis mono-infections, before this final goal can be reached. The upcoming years will then elucidate if the Dutch' hands on approach has resulted in sufficient progress against HCV and if the Netherlands will lead the way towards nationwide HCV elimination.Entities:
Keywords: Hep-CORE, HCV cascade of care; Hepatitis C virus; Micro-elimination
Year: 2018 PMID: 30288334 PMCID: PMC6162944 DOI: 10.1186/s41124-018-0040-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Med Policy ISSN: 2059-5166
Hepatitis C micro-elimination progress in target populations in the Netherlands in 2017
| Population size (N) | HCV seroprevalence (%) | Total chronic HCV infections (HCV RNA (+)) (N) | HCV infections cured (N)/(%) | Source/Comments | Main actions/interventions to facilitate HCV elimination | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV-infected | 22,900 | 12% | 1471 (R) | 1124/76% | [ | • Behavioral counseling. |
| Hemophilia patients (born < 1992) | NA | NA | 700 (R) | 190/27.1% | [ | • Once in a lifetime screening. |
| High-risk MSM (HIV-negative)b | NA | 4,8% | NA | NA/NA | [ | • Behavioral counseling. |
| Migrants from high endemic countries | 1,527,032 | NA | 13,819 (E) | NA/NA | [ | • Raise awareness of HCV through local/multimedia information campaigns. |
| PWID | 14,000 | 39–74% | 4040–7666 (C) | NA/NA | [ | • Once in a lifetime or frequentc screening (depending on risk behavior). |
| Prisoners | 10,194/each day | 7.4–13.9% | 558–1049 (C) | NA/NA | [ | • Educate prison doctors on HCV. |
| Hemodialysis patients | 17,132 | NA | NA | NA/NA | [ | • Once in a lifetime screening. |
| Health care workersd | NA | NA | NA | NA/NA | – | • Once in a lifetime screening by employer. |
| General Dutch population | 17,081,507a | 0.1–0.4% | 12,640–50,561 (C) | 4427/8–35% | [ | • Raise awareness of HCV through multimedia information campaigns. |
PWID people who (have ever) inject(ed) drugs, MSM men who have sex with men, NA not available. (R) = reported numbers from publications of registries; (E) = estimated numbers reported in studies; (C) = calculated from seroprevalence estimates multiplied by .74 (assumed spontaneous clearance rate of 26%)
a https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/#/CBS/nl, Dutch population numbers in 2017
b MSM with high-risk sexual activities
c One to four times per year
d Health care workers who perform hazardous tasks, putting them at risk for acquiring of transferring a hepatitis C infection (definition from the National Health Council) [4]
Fig. 1Dutch HCV care cascade
Fig. 3All 45 hepatitis treatment centers in the Netherlands [41–44]
Fig. 2Dutch HCV healthcare stakeholders