Abstract

BackgroundHepatitis C (HCV) is a deleterious virus that can be cured with new, highly effective anti-viral treatments, yet more than 185 million individuals worldwide remain HCV positive (with the vast majority un-diagnosed or untreated). Of importance, HCV is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and liver cancer, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) where the prevalence remains high but uncertain due to little population-based evidence of the epidemic. We aimed to synthesize available data to calculate and highlight the HCV disease burden in SSA.MethodsWeighted random-effects generalized linear mixed models were used to estimate prevalence by risk cohort, African region (Southern, Eastern, Western, and Central Africa), type of assay used, publication year, and whether the estimate included children. A pooled prevalence estimate was also calculated. Multi-variable analyses were limited to cohort and region specific prevalence estimates in the adult population due to limited studies including children. Prevalence estimates were additionally weighted using the known adult population size within each region.ResultsWe included more than 10 years of data. Almost half of the studies on HCV prevalence in SSA were from the Western region (49 %), and over half of all studies were from either blood donor (25 %) or general population cohorts (31 %). In uni-variable analyses, prevalence was lowest in Southern Africa (0.72 %), followed by Eastern Africa at 3.00 %, Western Africa at 4.14 %, and Central Africa at 7.82 %. Blood donors consistently had the lowest prevalence (1.78 %), followed by pregnant women (2.51 %), individuals with comorbid HIV (3.57 %), individuals from the general population (5.41 %), those with a chronic illness (7.99 %), and those at high risk for infection (10.18 %). After adjusting for the population size in each region, the overall adult prevalence of HCV in SSA rose from 3.82 to 3.94 %.ConclusionThis meta-analysis offers a timely update to the HCV disease burden in SSA and offers additional evidence of the burgeoning epidemic. The study highlights the need to account for type of cohort and region variation when describing the HCV epidemic in SSA, the need for more studies that include children, as well as the need to factor in such variations when planning public health interventions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12879-016-1584-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C (HCV) is a deleterious virus that can be cured with new, highly effective anti-viral treatments, yet more than 185 million individuals worldwide remain Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) positive

  • Composition of HCV Sero-prevalence studies in Sub-Saharan Africa Of the 361 published articles and abstracts identified for this analysis 185 articles comprising K = 221 independent cohorts were retained

  • The largest proportion of studies reporting prevalence estimates occurred among the general population and blood donors (27.1 % each), followed by HIV infected individuals (21.7 %)

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C (HCV) is a deleterious virus that can be cured with new, highly effective anti-viral treatments, yet more than 185 million individuals worldwide remain HCV positive (with the vast majority un-diagnosed or untreated). HCV is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and liver cancer, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) where the prevalence remains high but uncertain due to little population-based evidence of the epidemic. Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a leading cause of chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and liver cancer worldwide and is a primary indication for liver transplantation [1]. New highly active anti-viral agents provide the opportunity to cure diagnosed and treated individuals [2]. Significant discrepancies exist in recent HCV global burden estimates. Mohd Hanafiah et al [3] estimated >185 million individuals worldwide were HCV antibody positive (sero-positive) in 2005, a 52 % increase from 1990 and, recently, Gower et al (2014) estimated 115 million individuals world-wide were sero-positive, noting more than 80 million individuals expressed viremic infection

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