We can eradicate Hepatitis C in the emerging world - here's how

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The diagnosis Hepatitis written on a clipboard

New faster-acting and more effective treatments for Hepatitis C are transforming treatment - offering a cure for, and even eradication of, the potentially fatal infection. But now the world must diagnose and treat the millions of patients with the condition - a particularly big challenge in developing countries. 

Hepatitis C is a huge global health problem: the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 150-180 million people are chronically infected, causing the deaths of up to 500,000 people every year.

But new all-oral therapies for Hepatitis C virus (HCV) have emerged in the last few years, and have transformed the prospects for people with the condition. Direct-acting antiviral (DAA) drugs, such as Gilead's Sovaldi and Harvoni and AbbVie's Viekira Pak demonstrate higher efficacy, shorter treatment duration and better safety profiles than existing treatments. This means that, for the first time, the prospect of eradicating the virus is now a realistic goal.

But this could take several decades to achieve, and the challenges and obstacles to eradication are most numerous in the emerging nations. So what are these challenges, and how do we overcome them?

Uncovering the 'silent pandemic'

Often termed a 'silent pandemic', HCV-infected patients are asymptomatic for many years, unknowingly acting as reservoirs for on-going transmission and frequently progressing to chronic hepatic diseases such as fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.

The prevalence of HCV is higher in emerging countries. For example, 14-20% adults in Egypt have HCV, compared to 0.4% in developed countries, such as Sweden.2 In the emerging countries, HCV transmission is mostly healthcare associated, with infections commonly occurring due to unsafe use of injections in healthcare settings, poor infection control, and use of blood unscreened for HCV. Other high risk-groups for HCV include people with HIV (PLHIV), people who inject drugs (PWID), men who have sex with men (MSM), and prisoners.3

EgyptBig
As HCV infection is mostly asymptomatic the majority of patients are unaware of their status. Also, lack of awareness regarding the need for screening among healthcare workers and high-risk groups, and high costs of diagnostic testing and treatment lead to dismal testing rates and case detection in both developed and emerging nations.

Emerging countries undergoing epidemiologic transition with increasing burdens of chronic diseases have competing priorities and face additional barriers, such as need for screening of blood for HCV, unavailability of sterile equipment, and lack of national/political will to recognise HCV as a public health problem. The process to reach the eradication of HCV by treatment is gradual and faces many challenges (Figure 1).

Until 2011, interferon alfa with ribavirin remained the first line therapy to treat HCV infection. Apart from being expensive, this combination regimen was complex, lengthy, had limited efficacy and caused severe adverse effects eventually leading to lower patient compliance.

The arrival of DAA drugs has led the global healthcare community to believe that for the first time a viral infection without a vaccine can be eradicated by treatment alone. Stakeholders involved in viral hepatitis management across many emerging countries believe oral therapy can make a major impact on HCV infection levels in their countries.4 However, the affordability of newer therapies is still a major concern, especially in emerging countries, where there is the greatest concentration of people with HCV.

Fig1HCVeradication

Reaching the target:

The WHO and other advocacy groups have been working to create action plans to realise this vision of HCV eradication. A framework that brings together the following is required –

• Various stakeholders to promote and drive awareness among not just patients but also physician and policymaker communities

• Demonstration of the actual burden (epidemiology as well as economic) of HCV

• Encouragement of continued research to demonstrate the challenges and benefits to local communities

• Access path that prioritises HCV prevention and management goals leading to eradication

A proposed action framework for HCV eradication in emerging countries - CA(2)RE (Figure 2) is outlined below.

 

Fig2HCVeradication

Collaboration

As in poliomyelitis, eradication of HCV requires a strong political commitment and collaboration between various national, regional and international stakeholders such as donors, policymakers, non-governmental organisations. Emerging countries like Egypt, Ukraine, Thailand, Georgia and India are progressing in overcoming the challenges by such collaboration.5

Awareness

Patients, high-risk groups, healthcare providers and policymakers have very little knowledge of HCV. Screening measures targeted towards high-risk groups help uncover the asymptomatic patients, making them eligible for treatment and hence moving them out of the pool of HCV transmitters. Since the rate of ongoing HCV infection is also high in emerging countries, it is important to generate awareness among the high-risk groups and healthcare providers. Local research is needed to be able to better understand the impact of activities at a local level.

Access to care

Access to, and availability of, newer therapies can be improved by understanding and devising a way across the patent laws. Government initiatives, policies, guidelines and recommendations for the treatment would also be effective. Stakeholders can also learn lessons from programmes that overcame HIV epidemic challenges – high drug prices, drug patents, lack of political will, untrained healthcare workforce and inadequate infrastructure - and apply the same to improve access to screening, diagnosis and treatment of HCV patients in emerging countries.3

Resource optimisation, epidemilogy and research

Emerging countries need to mobilise/plan existing programmes in HIV and Tuberculosis and allocate future resources to prevent, screen and manage HCV infections.

Lastly, in order to control any disease, the most important step is to gauge the magnitude of the problem. Policy makers can roll-out targeted strategies to control HCV if they understand the country-specific epidemiological parameters, such as burden of disease, types of prevalent genotypes, main route of transmission, and identify the groups at risk (recipients of blood products, HIV, IDUs, pregnant mothers etc).

References

1 Hepatitis C fact sheet. Available at: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs164/en/. Accessed on: 16 March 2016.

2 G. Papatheodoridis et al. Public health issues of hepatitis C virus infection. Best Practice & Research Clinical Gastroenterology. 2012; 26: 371-380.

3 M Lemoine et al. Viral hepatitis in resource-limited countries and access to antiviral therapies: current and future challenges. Future Virol. 2013 Apr; 8(4): 371–380.

4. KAP Survey on Impact of Oral Therapies for Viral Hepatitis in Emerging Countries. Available at: http://www.fs-researchcenter.com/admin/Bullet_PDF/141029_FSRC-KAP_Survey_Report.pdf. Accessed on 16 March 2016.

5. Low- and Middle-Income Countries Defuse Hepatitis C, the "Viral Time Bomb". Available at: http://www.pipelinereport.org/2013/hcv-global-access. Accessed on 16 March 2016.

 

About the author

Dr Arun Gowda, a physician by training, has worked in the health domain for the last 15 years. He is director of the scientific platform FSRC at Phamax AG on market access strategies and employing real-world evidence to support healthcare access.

Previously, Arun was global product lead at Nokia, managing mHealth in high-growth economies. Prior to Nokia, he worked with pharmaceutical analytics and consulting organisations supporting pharma and FMCG companies.

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Andrew McConaghie

23 March, 2016