| Literature DB >> 31074817 |
Jagpreet Chhatwal1,2, Qiushi Chen1,2,3, Xiaojie Wang4, Turgay Ayer5, Yueran Zhuo2, Naveed Z Janjua6,7, Fasiha Kanwal8,9.
Abstract
Importance: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a global health problem. The World Health Assembly recently pledged to eliminate HCV by 2030. However, in Pakistan, a country with one of the highest prevalence rates, the feasibility and cost of HCV elimination are not known.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31074817 PMCID: PMC6512462 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.3613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Different Hepatitis C Virus Testing Algorithms Evaluated to Scale Up Interventions in Pakistan
| Testing Algorithm | Screening Test | Detection of Viremia | Assessment of Hepatitis C Treatment Response |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1 (base case) | Laboratory based | Nucleic acid test | Nucleic acid test |
| T2 | Laboratory based | HCVcAg test | Nucleic acid test |
| T3 | Point of care | Nucleic acid test | Nucleic acid test |
| T4 | Point of care | GeneXpert | GeneXpert |
| T5 | Point of care | HCVcAg test and nucleic acid test if HCVcAg test result is negative | HCVcAg test |
| T6 | Point of care | HCVcAg test and nucleic acid test if HCVcAg test result is negative | Nucleic acid test |
| T7 | Laboratory based | GeneXpert | GeneXpert |
Abbreviation: HCVcAg, hepatitis C virus core antigen.
Performance characteristics of each test are as follows: point-of-care screening, 99.5% sensitivity and 99.8% specificity; nucleic acid test, 99.8% sensitivity and 99.7% specificity; GeneXpert, 99.8% sensitivity and 99.7% specificity; HCVcAg test, 93.2% sensitivity and 98% specificity; and HCVcAg test and nucleic acid test if HCVcAg test result is negative, 99.8% sensitivity and 99.8% specificity.
Figure 1. Number of Persons Who Need to Be Diagnosed and Treated in Pakistan Each Year to Meet the World Health Organization Target of Hepatitis C Virus Elimination
The annual diagnosis rate would need to be scaled up to at least 900 000 cases per year, and the annual treatment rate would need to be scaled up to at least 700 000 persons per year to eliminate hepatitis C virus by 2030.
Figure 2. Number of Viremic (Aware and Unaware) and Cured Individuals in Pakistan From 2015 to 2030 Under Status Quo vs World Health Organization (WHO) Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Elimination Scenario
The elimination scenario was defined as an annual diagnosis rate of at least 900 000 cases per year and an annual treatment rate of at least 700 000 persons per year. Under the elimination scenario, the number of cured patients would exceed the number of viremic patients in year 2023. Bands show 95% uncertainty intervals generated by probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
Figure 3. Annual Incidence of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Infection, Number of HCV-Associated Deaths, and Disability-Adjusted Life-Years (DALYs) in Pakistan Under Status Quo and World Health Organization (WHO) HCV Elimination Scenario From 2015 to 2030
The elimination scenario was defined as annual diagnosis rate of at least 900 000 cases per year and annual treatment rate of at least 700 000 persons per year. Error bars indicate 95% uncertainty intervals.
Figure 4. Cost of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Management From 2018 to 2030 Under Status Quo vs World Health Organization (WHO) HCV Elimination Scenario
The elimination scenario was defined as annual diagnosis rate of at least 900 000 cases per year and annual treatment rate of at least 700 000 persons per year. A, Comparison of annual cost of HCV management under status quo vs WHO elimination scenario using different testing algorithms (as defined in the Table). B, Total cost of HCV management from 2018 to 2030 under status quo and different testing algorithms that result in HCV elimination by 2030. Testing algorithms T3 through T7 were associated with cost savings compared with the cost under status quo. The T4 algorithm provided the lowest cost of HCV management ($5.6 billion) and was associated with $2.6 billion in cost savings compared with the cost of status quo ($8.2 billion) (triangles).