| Literature DB >> 35451742 |
Bjoern Schwander1, Josh Feldstein2, Suela Sulo3, Luis Gonzalez3, Galal ElShishiney4, Mohamed Hassany5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a global public health crisis. Egypt presents the highest HCV global prevalence. Recently, three different HCV screening/testing/therapy programs were implemented: In 2014 (wave 1), major decisions on HCV therapy were enacted, accompanied by a 99% discount for the HCV therapy sofosbuvir. In 2016 (wave 2), a first testing program was launched to identify patients for free treatment. In 2018 (wave 3), population-wide screening was conducted using a WHO-prequalified finger prick rapid diagnostic test (RDT) to identify/treat all Egyptians with HCV. The financial advantages of HCV screening programs (wave 1-3 results) were estimated vs a baseline period of limited Egyptian HCV testing/therapeutic intervention (2008-2014).Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Disease burden; Economic consequences; Egypt; Hepatitis C; Screening; Societal perspective
Year: 2022 PMID: 35451742 PMCID: PMC9124269 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-022-00631-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Population estimates, and HCV testing and therapy patterns, in Egypt
| Observation periods | Baseline | References | Wave 1 | References | Wave 2 | References | Wave 3 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt (time/year) | 2008–2014 | Omran et al. [ | 2014–2015 | Omran et al. [ | 2016–Sep 2018 | Esmat et al. [ | Oct 2018–Sep 2019 | Esmat et al. [ |
| Total observation period in years | 6 | Omran et al. [ | 1 | Omran et al. [ | 3 | Esmat et al. [ | 1 | Esmat et al. [ |
| Target population ( | 49,700,000 | Gomaa et al. [ | 61,150,000 | Gomaa et al. [ | 62,000,000 | Esmat et al. [ | 67,400,000 | Esmat et al. [ |
| HCV prevalence (seroprevalence) (%) | 14.7% | Omran et al. [ | 10.0% | Omran et al. [ | 8.0% | Expert opinion | 6.4% | Expert opinion |
| HCV prevalence (viremic) (%) | 9.7% | Omran et al. [ | 7.0% | Omran et al. [ | 5.6% | Calculateda | 4.5% | Calculateda |
| Proportion viremic/seroprevalence | 66.0% | Calculateda | 70.0% | Calculateda | 70.0% | Assumed to stay stable | 70.0% | Assumed to stay stable |
| HCV prevalence (seroprevalence) ( | 7,305,900 | Calculateda | 6,115,000 | Calculateda | 4,960,000 | Calculateda | 4,285,714 | Calculateda |
| HCV prevalence (viremic) ( | 4,820,900 | Calculateda | 4,280,500 | Calculateda | 3,472,000 | Calculateda | 3,000,000 | Calculateda |
| Population tested ( | 391,234 | Expert estimate/opinion | 822,889 | Expert estimate/opinion | 6,500,000 | Esmat et al. [ | 56,000,000 | Esmat et al. [ |
| HCV (newly) detected ( | 39,123 | Expert estimate/opinion | 82,289 | Expert estimate/opinion | 365,000 | Esmat et al. [ | 2,400,000 | Esmat et al. [ |
| Known HCV ( | 310,877 | Expert estimate/opinion | 167,711 | Expert estimate/opinion | 1,635,000 | Esmat et al. [ | 0 | Expert estimate/opinion |
| Population treated ( | 350,000 | Kassas et al. [ | 250,000 | Kassas et al. [ | 2,000,000 | Esmat et al. [ | 2,400,000 | Esmat et al. [ |
| Treatment cure rate | 97.5% | Conservative assumption | 97.5% | Conservative assumption | 97.5% | Conservative assumption | 97.5% | Conservative assumption |
| Treated successfully ( | 341,250 | Calculateda | 243,750 | Calculateda | 1,950,000 | Calculateda | 2,340,000 | Calculateda |
| Untreated/not successfully treated (viremic) ( | 4,479,650 | Calculateda | 4,036,750 | Calculateda | 1,522,000 | Calculateda | 660,000 | Calculateda |
aNumbers were calculated on the basis of those stated above in the same column of the table
Unit costs of testing and treatment of HCV in Egypt
| Period | Baseline | Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt (time/year) | 2008–2014 | 2014–2015 | 2016–Sep 2018 | Oct 2018–Sep 2019 |
| Testing sequence | 1. ELISA/2. HCV RNA | 1. ELISA/2. HCV RNA | 1. ELISA/2. HCV RNA | 1. Rapid test/2. HCV RNA |
| Cost per ELISA test/rapid test (wave 3) | $0.60 | $0.60 | $0.60 | $0.60 |
| Total cost ELISA test/rapid test (direct cost and labor cost) | $0.80 | $0.80 | $0.80 | $0.80 |
| Cost for further testing/HCV-RNA diagnoses | $6.00 | $6.00 | $6.00 | $6.00 |
| Treatment costs/case (12 weeks sofosbuvir) | $900.00 | $900.00 | $90.00 | $90.00 |
Fig. 1Direct costs in USD/number of patients tested and treated by therapy wave in Egypt. M = Million USD
Fig. 2Total costs (direct and indirect costs) in USD/number of patients and liver-related deaths and life years lost due to HCV by therapy wave in Egypt. M = Million USD
| Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection effects an estimated 71 million people worldwide, with 400,000 deaths annually. The prevalence of HCV in Egypt is the highest in the world. The cumulative cost burden of HCV in Egypt is estimated at US $89 billion for the years 2015–2030 |
| As a result of this high prevalence and cost burden, treatment of HCV in Egypt since 2008 has become one of the top national priorities and the country launched various national programs intending to identify and cure Egyptian HCV-infected patients |
| The goal of the present analysis—based on published epidemiological HCV data, cost and health economic modeling analyses, and findings from three different screening/testing/treatment programs—was to estimate the impact of Egypt’s national HCV screening and treatment efforts on direct, indirect, and total healthcare costs |
| The application of a WHO-prequalified HCV diagnostic test to mass screening, together with delivery of therapy to identified patients with HCV, suggests a likely cost-effective intervention from a societal perspective, representing the dominant option compared with other HCV screening, testing, and therapy approaches in Egypt between 2008 and 2019. However, as a result of the use of real-world data, model-based analyses, and the inherent uncertainty such methodologies can result in, other advanced health economic assessments to confirm the presented conclusions are appropriate |