BMJ Open (Jun 2019)

Changes in hepatitis C burden and treatment trends in Europe during the era of direct-acting antivirals: a modelling study

  • Xiaojie Wang,
  • Qiushi Chen,
  • Turgay Ayer,
  • Emily Bethea,
  • Fasiha Kanwal,
  • Yueran Zhuo,
  • Stefano Fagiuoli,
  • Jorg Petersen,
  • Jagpreet Chhatwal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026726
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6

Abstract

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ObjectivesOral direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) for hepatitis C virus (HCV) have dramatically changed the treatment paradigm. Our aim was to project temporal trends in HCV diagnosis, treatment and disease burden in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK.DesignA mathematical simulation model of natural history of HCV infection.ParticipantsHCV-infected patients defined based on country-specific age, fibrosis and genotype distributions.InterventionsHCV screening practice and availability of different waves of DAA treatment in each country.Outcome measuresTemporal trends in the number of patients who achieve sustained virological response (SVR), fail treatment (by drug regimen) and develop advanced sequelae from 2014 to 2030 in each country.ResultsWe projected that 1 324 000 individuals would receive treatment from 2014 to 2030 in the five European countries and 12 000–37 000 of them would fail to achieve SVR. By 2021, the number of individuals cured of HCV would supersede the number of actively infected individuals in France, Germany, Spain and the UK. Under status quo, the diagnosis rate would reach between 65% and 75% and treatment coverage between 65% and 74% by 2030 in these countries. The number of patients who fail treatment would decrease over time, with the majority of those who fail treatment having been exposed to non-structural protein 5A inhibitors.ConclusionsIn the era of DAAs, the number of people with HCV who achieved a cure will exceed the number of viraemic patients, but many patients will remain undiagnosed, untreated, fail multiple treatments and develop advanced sequelae. Scaling-up screening and treatment capacity, and timely and effective retreatment are needed to avail the full benefits of DAAs and to meet HCV elimination targets set by WHO.