Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Lancet Glob Health. 2020 Mar;8(3):e440-e450. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30003-6.
The WHO elimination strategy for hepatitis C virus advocates scaling up screening and treatment to reduce global hepatitis C incidence by 80% by 2030, but little is known about how this reduction could be achieved and the costs of doing so. We aimed to evaluate the effects and cost of different strategies to scale up screening and treatment of hepatitis C in Pakistan and determine what is required to meet WHO elimination targets for incidence.
We adapted a previous model of hepatitis C virus transmission, treatment, and disease progression for Pakistan, calibrating using available data to incorporate a detailed cascade of care for hepatitis C with cost data on diagnostics and hepatitis C treatment. We modelled the effect on various outcomes and costs of alternative scenarios for scaling up screening and hepatitis C treatment in 2018-30. We calibrated the model to country-level demographic data for 1960-2015 (including population growth) and to hepatitis C seroprevalence data from a national survey in 2007-08, surveys among people who inject drugs (PWID), and hepatitis C seroprevalence trends among blood donors. The cascade of care in our model begins with diagnosis of hepatitis C infection through antibody screening and RNA confirmation. Diagnosed individuals are then referred to care and started on treatment, which can result in a sustained virological response (effective cure). We report the median and 95% uncertainty interval (UI) from 1151 modelled runs.
One-time screening of 90% of the 2018 population by 2030, with 80% referral to treatment, was projected to lead to 13·8 million (95% UI 13·4-14·1) individuals being screened and 350 000 (315 000-385 000) treatments started annually, decreasing hepatitis C incidence by 26·5% (22·5-30·7) over 2018-30. Prioritised screening of high prevalence groups (PWID and adults aged ≥30 years) and rescreening (annually for PWID, otherwise every 10 years) are likely to increase the number screened and treated by 46·8% and decrease incidence by 50·8% (95% UI 46·1-55·0). Decreasing hepatitis C incidence by 80% is estimated to require a doubling of the primary screening rate, increasing referral to 90%, rescreening the general population every 5 years, and re-engaging those lost to follow-up every 5 years. This approach could cost US$8·1 billion, reducing to $3·9 billion with lowest costs for diagnostic tests and drugs, including health-care savings, and implementing a simplified treatment algorithm.
Pakistan will need to invest about 9·0% of its yearly health expenditure to enable sufficient scale up in screening and treatment to achieve the WHO hepatitis C elimination target of an 80% reduction in incidence by 2030.
UNITAID.
世界卫生组织(WHO)消除丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)战略主张扩大筛查和治疗范围,到 2030 年将全球 HCV 发病率降低 80%,但目前尚不清楚如何实现这一降低幅度,以及所需的成本。我们旨在评估在巴基斯坦扩大 HCV 筛查和治疗规模的不同策略的效果和成本,并确定为实现世卫组织消除发病率目标所需的条件。
我们对先前 HCV 传播、治疗和疾病进展的模型进行了调整,以适应巴基斯坦的情况,并使用现有数据进行了校准,纳入了 HCV 治疗的详细护理流程,并纳入了 HCV 诊断和治疗的成本数据。我们对 2018-30 年扩大 HCV 筛查和治疗的各种方案对各种结果和成本的影响进行了建模。我们根据 1960-2015 年的国家人口数据(包括人口增长)和 2007-08 年全国调查、注射吸毒者(PWID)调查以及献血者 HCV 血清流行率趋势中的 HCV 血清流行率数据,对模型进行了校准。我们模型中的护理流程始于通过抗体筛查和 RNA 确认检测 HCV 感染。确诊后,将患者转至护理机构并开始治疗,从而实现持续病毒学应答(有效治愈)。我们报告了 1151 次模拟运行的中位数和 95%置信区间(UI)。
到 2030 年,对 2018 年人口进行一次性筛查,筛查率达到 90%,80%的患者接受治疗,预计每年将有 1380 万人(95%UI 1340-1410)接受筛查,35 万人(31.5-38.5 万人)开始治疗,2018-30 年 HCV 发病率将降低 26.5%(22.5-30.7)。对高流行人群(PWID 和年龄≥30 岁的成年人)进行优先筛查和重新筛查(PWID 每年筛查一次,否则每 10 年筛查一次)可能会增加筛查和治疗人数,分别增加 46.8%和 50.8%(95%UI 46.1-55.0),发病率降低 50.8%。要降低 80%的 HCV 发病率,估计需要将初级筛查率提高一倍,提高转诊率至 90%,每 5 年对普通人群进行重新筛查,每 5 年对失访者进行重新接触。这种方法可能需要花费 81 亿美元,而采用最低成本的诊断测试和药物(包括医疗保健储蓄),并实施简化的治疗算法,成本可降低至 39 亿美元。
巴基斯坦需要投资其每年卫生支出的约 9.0%,以实现世卫组织 HCV 消除目标,即到 2030 年将发病率降低 80%。
联合国艾滋病规划署。