| Literature DB >> 30992636 |
Jue Liu1, Wannian Liang2, Wenzhan Jing1, Min Liu1.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major public health problem worldwide. China has the world's largest burden of HBV infection and will be a major contributor towards the global elimination of hepatitis B disease by 2030. The country has made good progress in reducing incidence of HBV infection in the past three decades. The achievements are mainly due to high vaccination coverages among children and high coverage of timely birth-dose vaccine for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HBV (both > 95%). However, China still faces challenges in achieving its target of 65% reduction in mortality from hepatitis B by 2030. Based on targets of the World Health Organization's Global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis 2016-2021, we highlight further priorities for action towards HBV elimination in China. To achieve the impact target of reduced mortality we suggest that the service coverage targets of diagnosis and treatment should be prioritized. First, improvements are needed in the diagnostic and treatment abilities of medical institutions and health workers. Second, the government needs to reduce the financial burden of health care on patients. Third, better coordination is needed across existing national programmes and resources to establish an integrated prevention and control system that covers prevention, screening, diagnosis and treatment of HBV infection across the life cycle. In this way, progress can be made towards achieving the target of eliminating hepatitis B in China by 2030.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30992636 PMCID: PMC6453311 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.18.219469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Fig. 1WHO evaluation framework for hepatitis B virus elimination
Fig. 2Target and actual hepatitis B virus vaccination coverage and hospital delivery rate in China, 1992–2015
Gaps and priorities in progress towards elimination of hepatitis B in China by 2030
| Target areaa | Baseline values | Targets | Assessment of gaps and priorities for China | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global, 2015 | China (year) | WHO, 2020 | WHO, 2030 | China, 2020 | Gaps to 2030b | Efforts required | Priorityc | |||
| Incidence: New cases of chronic viral hepatitis B infectionsd | 1.3% | 0.3% | 30% reduction (equivalent to 1% prevalence of HBsAg among children) | 90% reduction (equivalent to 0.1% prevalence of HBsAg among children) | Maintain < 1% | Small | More | NA | ||
| Mortality: Viral hepatitis B deaths | 0.887 million | 0.308 million | 10% reduction | 65% reduction | NA | Large | Maximum | Highest | ||
| Hepatitis B virus vaccination: Childhood vaccine coverage (third dose coverage) | 82% | 99.6% | 90% | 90% | Maintain > 95% | None | Maintain | NA | ||
| Prevention of hepatitis B virus mother-to-child transmission: Hepatitis B virus birth-dose vaccination coverage or other approach to prevent mother-to-child transmission | 38% | 95.6% | 50% | 90% | Maintain > 90% | None | Maintain | NA | ||
| Blood safety: % of donations screened in a quality-assured manner | 89% | 100% | 95% | 100% | Nucleic acid test 100% | None | Maintain | NA | ||
| Safe injections: % of injections administered with safety-engineered devices in and out of health facilities | 5% | 86.5% | 50% | 90% | NA | Small | More | NA | ||
| Harm reduction: No. of sterile needles and syringes provided per person who injects drugs per year | 20 | 208 | 200 | 300 | NA | Small | More | NA | ||
| Viral hepatitis B diagnosis: % of chronic hepatitis infections diagnosed | < 5% | 19% | 30% | 90% | NA | Large | Maximum | Highest | ||
| Viral hepatitis B treatment: % of eligible persons with chronic hepatitis B virus infection treated | < 1% | 10–11% | Cumulative target is 5 million people treated for HBV | 80% | NA | Large | Maximum | Highest | ||
HBV: hepatitis B virus; HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen; NA: not applicable; WHO: World Health Organization.
a Targets of the WHO global health sector strategy.
b Large gap defines the current baseline value differs from the target value by more than 50%. Small gap defines the gap is less than 50%.
c Priority to achieve the goal of elimination hepatitis by 2030 in China.
d Prevalence of HBsAg in children younger than 5 years.
e Percentage of safe injections among people who inject drugs.
Fig. 3Mortality due to hepatitis B disease in China and globally, 1990–2016
Fig. 4Disability-adjusted life-years attributed to hepatitis B disease in China and globally, 1990–2016