PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Prenatal hepatitis C screening, diagnoses, and follow-up testing in British Columbia, 2008-2019.

  • Margo E Pearce,
  • Amanda Yu,
  • Maria Alvarez,
  • Sofia R Bartlett,
  • Mawuena Binka,
  • Dahn Jeong,
  • Emilia Clementi,
  • Prince Adu,
  • James Wilton,
  • Eric M Yoshida,
  • Neora Pick,
  • Jane A Buxton,
  • Jason Wong,
  • Agatha Jassem,
  • Mel Krajden,
  • Naveed Z Janjua

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244575
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. e0244575

Abstract

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ObjectiveCurrent guidelines in British Columbia recommend prenatal screening for hepatitis C antibodies (anti-HCV) if risk factors are present. We aimed to estimate frequency of prenatal anti-HCV testing, new diagnoses, repeated and follow-up testing among BC women.MethodsBC Centre for Disease Control Public Health Laboratory data estimated the number of BC women (assigned female at birth or unknown sex) aged 13-49 who received routine prenatal serological screening (HIV, hepatitis B, syphilis and rubella) from 2008-2019. Anti-HCV tests ordered the same day as routine prenatal screens were considered prenatal anti-HCV tests. Assessment of follow-up was based on HCV RNA and/or genotype testing within one year of new prenatal anti-HCV diagnoses.ResultsIn 2019, 55,202 routine prenatal screens were carried out for 50,392 BC women. Prenatal anti-HCV tests increased significantly, from 19.6% (9,704/49,515) in 2008 to 54.6% (27,516/50,392) in 2019 (pConclusionPrenatal anti-HCV testing increased substantially over the study period. However, new HCV diagnoses remained relatively stable, suggesting that a considerable proportion of BC women with low or no risk are being screened as part of prenatal care. The vast majority of women with new HCV diagnoses receive appropriate follow-up HCV RNA and genotype testing, which may indicate interest in HCV treatment. These findings contribute to the discussion around potential for prenatal anti-HCV screening in an effort to eliminate HCV.