England Set To Eliminate Hepatitis C, Five Years Ahead Of Target
England is
set to become one of the first countries in the world to eliminate
hepatitis C, thanks to an NHS drive to identify people with the virus, and
treat them using antiviral drugs.
In the past
five years, 70,000 people have been cured of the disease, which spreads through
blood-to-blood contact and can cause liver cancer and liver failure. The NHS
said it was on track to eliminate the virus in the community by 2025, five
years ahead of a World Health Organisation target.
Deaths from
hepatitis C – including liver disease and cancer – have fallen by 35%
since NHS England struck a five-year deal worth almost £1bn to buy
antiviral drugs for thousands of patients in 2018.
The
World Health Organization’s target of a 10% reduction in hepatitis
C-related death by 2020 has been exceeded threefold in England.
An NHS
screening programme launched in September is also enabling up to 80,000
people unknowingly living with the disease to get a diagnosis and treatment
sooner by searching health records for key risk factors, such as historic blood
transfusions or HIV.
Prof Sir
Stephen Powis, NHS England’s national medical director, said the
health service was “leading the world” in the drive to save lives and eliminate
hepatitis C while also tackling health inequalities.
He said:
“Thanks to targeted screening and because the NHS has a proven track record of
striking medicine agreements that give patients access to the latest drugs, we
are on track to beat global targets and become the first country to eliminate
hepatitis C.”
Dedicated
‘Find and Treat’ programmes have also helped the NHS reduce hepatitis C cases
among vulnerable communities such as homeless people, who are more at risk due
to substance misuse, sharing toothbrushes or razors, and other lifestyle
factors associated with rough sleeping.
NHS staff
are visiting at-risk communities in specially equipped trucks to test for the
virus and carry out liver health checks with portable scans to detect organ
damage.
Hepatitis C
is usually spread through blood-to-blood contact. It can be spread by sharing
unsterilised needles – particularly needles used to inject recreational drugs.
If left untreated, the virus can cause liver cancer and liver failure.
Homelessness
charity St Mungo’s is providing same-day screenings along with help to complete
treatment as part of the programme.
Sara Hide, a
hepatitis C coordinator at St Mungo’s in Oxford, said: “With treatment for
hepatitis C now less invasive – a course of medication for eight to 12 weeks –
we’ve seen an uptake in people responding to our screening services.”
Nationally,
the project has helped cure 70,000 people of the potentially fatal disease, NHS
England said. Within six years, it has also reduced the number of people
seeking liver transplants due to the virus by two-thirds, while the number of
annual registrations for a liver transplant in patients with hepatitis
C-related diseases has fallen from about 140 a year to fewer than 50 in 2020.
The project
has also provided 80% of its treatments to people from communities in the
poorest half of the population.
Since the
rollout of an NHS plan to treat children for hepatitis C last year, more than
100 children have received infection-curing antivirals, with 90% of treatments
given to children among the poorest 40%.
Hepatitis C
Trust chief executive Rachel Halford said: “The progress that has been made
towards elimination is truly astounding. We now need a final concerted effort
to make sure we reach all those that may be affected and reach elimination.”
Lord
Markham, the health minister, said: “I’m grateful to NHS staff and our partner
charities like St Mungo’s for the fantastic progress that has been made so far.
Deaths and prevalence of the virus have fallen consistently thanks to
improvements in diagnosis and access to treatments.”
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