WHO Collaborating Centre for Pharmaceutical Policy and Regulation, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands; Department of HIV and Global Hepatitis Programme, and Department of Health Systems Governance and Financing, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
Department of HIV and Global Hepatitis Programme, and Department of Health Systems Governance and Financing, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lancet Glob Health. 2019 Sep;7(9):e1180-e1188. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(19)30272-4. Epub 2019 Jul 25.
The World Health Assembly calls for elimination of viral hepatitis as a public health threat by 2030 (ie, -90% incidence and -65% mortality). However, WHO's 2017 cost projections to achieve health-related Sustainable Development Goals did not include the resources needed for hepatitis testing and treatment. We aimed to estimate the incremental commodity cost of adding scaled up interventions for testing and treatment of hepatitis to WHO's investment scenarios.
We added modelled costs for implementing WHO recommended hepatitis testing and treatment to the 2017 WHO cost projections. We quantified additional requirements for diagnostic tests, medicines, health workers' time, and programme support across 67 low-income and middle-income countries, from 2016-30. A progress scenario scaled up interventions and a more ambitious scenario was modelled to reach elimination by 2030. We used 2018 best available prices of diagnostics and generic medicines. We estimated total costs and the additional investment needed over the projection of the 2016 baseline cost.
The 67 countries considered included 230 million people living with hepatitis B virus (HBV) and 52 million people living with hepatitis C virus (HCV; 90% and 73% of the world's total, respectively). Under the progress scenario, 3250 million people (2400 million for HBV and 850 million for HCV) would be tested and 58·2 million people (24·1 million for HBV and 34·1 million for HCV) would be treated (total additional cost US$ 27·1 billion). Under the ambitious scenario, 11 631 million people (5502 million for HBV and 6129 million for HCV) would be tested and 93·8 million people (32·2 million for HBV and 61·6 million for HCV) would be treated (total additional cost $58·7 billion), averting 4·5 million premature deaths and leading to a gain of 51·5 million healthy life-years by 2030. However, if affordable HCV medicines remained inaccessible in 13 countries where medicine patents are protected, the additional cost of the ambitious scenario would increase to $118 billion. Hepatitis elimination would account for a 1·5% increase to the WHO ambitious health-care strengthening scenario costs, avert an additional 4·6% premature deaths, and add an additional 9·6% healthy life-years from 2016-30.
Access to affordable medicines in all countries will be key to reach hepatitis elimination. This study suggests that elimination is feasible in the context of universal health coverage. It points to commodities as key determinants for the overall price tag and to options for cost reduction strategies.
WHO, United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Unitaid.
世界卫生大会呼吁到 2030 年消除病毒性肝炎这一公共卫生威胁(即发病率降低 90%,死亡率降低 65%)。然而,世卫组织 2017 年为实现与卫生相关的可持续发展目标而进行的成本预测并未包括肝炎检测和治疗所需的资源。我们旨在估算将扩大检测和治疗肝炎的干预措施纳入世卫组织投资方案所需的新增商品成本。
我们在世卫组织 2017 年成本预测中增加了实施世卫组织建议的肝炎检测和治疗的模型成本。我们在 2016-2030 年期间,对 67 个低收入和中等收入国家的诊断检测、药品、卫生工作者时间和方案支持所需的额外资源进行了量化。一个进度情景扩大了干预措施的规模,而一个更具野心的情景则旨在到 2030 年实现消除目标。我们使用了 2018 年诊断和通用药品的最佳可用价格。我们估计了总费用以及在 2016 年基线成本预测期间的额外投资需求。
考虑的 67 个国家包括 2.3 亿慢性乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)感染者和 5200 万慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染者(分别占全球总数的 90%和 73%)。在进度情景下,将对 3.25 亿人(2.4 亿人用于 HBV,8500 万人用于 HCV)进行检测,对 5820 万人(2410 万人用于 HBV,3410 万人用于 HCV)进行治疗(新增成本 271 亿美元)。在野心勃勃的情景下,将对 116.31 亿人(55.02 亿人用于 HBV,61.29 亿人用于 HCV)进行检测,对 9380 万人(3220 万人用于 HBV,6160 万人用于 HCV)进行治疗(新增成本 587 亿美元),这将避免 450 万人过早死亡,并在 2030 年之前带来 5150 万健康生命年的增加。然而,如果 13 个药品专利受到保护的国家仍然无法获得负担得起的 HCV 药物,那么雄心勃勃情景的额外成本将增加到 1180 亿美元。消除肝炎将使世卫组织雄心勃勃的医疗保健加强方案成本增加 1.5%,在 2016-2030 年期间额外减少 4.6%的过早死亡,并增加 9.6%的健康生命年。
在所有国家获得负担得起的药物将是实现消除肝炎目标的关键。本研究表明,在全民健康覆盖的背景下,消除肝炎是可行的。它指出,商品是总体价格标签的关键决定因素,并指出了降低成本的策略选择。
世卫组织、美国疾病控制与预防中心、国际药品采购机制。