2020
DOI: 10.1111/liv.14363
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Micro‐elimination of hepatitis C virus

Abstract: Background & Aims HCV affects about 71 million people worldwide with 1.75 million new infections a year, mainly associated with healthcare, blood transfusion before screening of donors and drug use. Hepatitis C is a systemic disease with hepatic and extrahepatic manifestations resulting in increased morbidity and mortality in HCV‐infected patients compared to cured or uninfected individuals. Results The goal of eliminating hepatitis C by 2030 is based on the following three main actions: strengthening and incr… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…However, this approach is used also in wealthy countries with very low prevalence such as Belgium or the Netherlands [16][17][18]. This concept targets specific population subgroups : children (under the age of 15 years), HCV/HIV-coinfected persons, birth cohorts, haemodialysis patients, those diagnosed with haemophilia, men who have sex with men, migrants, people with advanced liver disease, people who inject drugs, prisoners, and transplant recipients [7,15,19,20]. In Romania, besides the already mentioned categories, we should include as target populations: people with intrafamilial transmission of HCV, transfusions and abortions during the communist era, subjects with professional exposure to blood products and multiple hospitalizations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this approach is used also in wealthy countries with very low prevalence such as Belgium or the Netherlands [16][17][18]. This concept targets specific population subgroups : children (under the age of 15 years), HCV/HIV-coinfected persons, birth cohorts, haemodialysis patients, those diagnosed with haemophilia, men who have sex with men, migrants, people with advanced liver disease, people who inject drugs, prisoners, and transplant recipients [7,15,19,20]. In Romania, besides the already mentioned categories, we should include as target populations: people with intrafamilial transmission of HCV, transfusions and abortions during the communist era, subjects with professional exposure to blood products and multiple hospitalizations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This strategy is focused on collectives with a high prevalence and/or in those subsets of patients with the worst prognosis in the short term. A proactive policy of searching for patients combined with the lack of restriction on treatment uptake facilitates the success of this strategy [3]. Our results show that after 5 years of proactive treatment implementation, more than 85% of patients were successfully treated, reaching a global HIV/HCV coinfection rate in our cohort of approximately 1%.…”
Section: To the Editormentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Additionally, the risk of reinfection among these people is very high [ 5 ]. This population group includes drug users, the homeless, and people with psychiatric illnesses, among others [ 10 ]. Therefore, the HCV elimination strategy requires reducing risky behaviors, expanding HCV testing, and unrestricted access to treatment [ 7 ].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, HCV infection prevalence can be substantially reduced through significant increases in the frequency of diagnosis and access to HCV treatment in target populations [ 4 ]. The most pragmatic approach to implementing HCV elimination would be to break down elimination goals into smaller goals for population segments (microelimination) [ 10 ]. Thus, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention interventions could be delivered more quickly and efficiently using innovative methods [ 12 ].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%