Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?

The burden of hepatitis C virus infection remains very high despite huge progress in the cure of the infection. The high prevalence of hepatitis C, especially in vulnerable groups and particularly drug users, may compromise the achievement of the 2030 WHO targets with a 90% reduction in new infections and a 65% reduction in mortality. Therapy with the latest pangenotypic direct-acting antivirals provides cure rates in the order of 97% with short-term oral treatment (8-12 weeks) and with an excellent safety and tolerability profile. Curing the infection causes significant health gains derived from preventing complications from cirrhosis, especially hepatocellular carcinoma, and from liver transplantation. Elimination of hepatitis seems feasible with the implementation of a massive therapy program, focusing particularly on vulnerable populations, through micro-elimination strategies, and in the general population with age-based screening. The reduction of the virus reservoir (humans are the only reservoir) is a determining factor in eradicating the virus.

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Main Authors: Velosa,José, Macedo,Guilherme
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Portuguesa de Gastrenterologia 2020
Online Access:http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2341-45452020000300004
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spelling oai:scielo:S2341-454520200003000042021-01-27Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?Velosa,JoséMacedo,Guilherme Hepatitis C Micro-elimination strategies Public health The burden of hepatitis C virus infection remains very high despite huge progress in the cure of the infection. The high prevalence of hepatitis C, especially in vulnerable groups and particularly drug users, may compromise the achievement of the 2030 WHO targets with a 90% reduction in new infections and a 65% reduction in mortality. Therapy with the latest pangenotypic direct-acting antivirals provides cure rates in the order of 97% with short-term oral treatment (8-12 weeks) and with an excellent safety and tolerability profile. Curing the infection causes significant health gains derived from preventing complications from cirrhosis, especially hepatocellular carcinoma, and from liver transplantation. Elimination of hepatitis seems feasible with the implementation of a massive therapy program, focusing particularly on vulnerable populations, through micro-elimination strategies, and in the general population with age-based screening. The reduction of the virus reservoir (humans are the only reservoir) is a determining factor in eradicating the virus.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Portuguesa de GastrenterologiaGE-Portuguese Journal of Gastroenterology v.27 n.3 20202020-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2341-45452020000300004en10.1159/222505582
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Portugal
countrycode PT
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-pt
tag revista
region Europa del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Velosa,José
Macedo,Guilherme
spellingShingle Velosa,José
Macedo,Guilherme
Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
author_facet Velosa,José
Macedo,Guilherme
author_sort Velosa,José
title Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
title_short Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
title_full Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
title_fullStr Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
title_full_unstemmed Elimination of Hepatitis C in Portugal: An Urban Legend?
title_sort elimination of hepatitis c in portugal: an urban legend?
description The burden of hepatitis C virus infection remains very high despite huge progress in the cure of the infection. The high prevalence of hepatitis C, especially in vulnerable groups and particularly drug users, may compromise the achievement of the 2030 WHO targets with a 90% reduction in new infections and a 65% reduction in mortality. Therapy with the latest pangenotypic direct-acting antivirals provides cure rates in the order of 97% with short-term oral treatment (8-12 weeks) and with an excellent safety and tolerability profile. Curing the infection causes significant health gains derived from preventing complications from cirrhosis, especially hepatocellular carcinoma, and from liver transplantation. Elimination of hepatitis seems feasible with the implementation of a massive therapy program, focusing particularly on vulnerable populations, through micro-elimination strategies, and in the general population with age-based screening. The reduction of the virus reservoir (humans are the only reservoir) is a determining factor in eradicating the virus.
publisher Sociedade Portuguesa de Gastrenterologia
publishDate 2020
url http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2341-45452020000300004
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AT macedoguilherme eliminationofhepatitiscinportugalanurbanlegend
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