Abstract

BackgroundElimination of hepatitis C virus (HCV) among people who inject drugs (PWID) is a costly investment, so strategies should not only focus on eliminating the disease, but also on preventing disease resurgence. The aims of this study are to compute the minimum necessary antiviral therapies to achieve elimination with and without the additional expansion of harm reduction (HR) programs and to examine the sustainability of HCV elimination after 2030 if treatment is discontinued.MethodWe considered two types of epidemic (with low (30%) and high (50%) proportion of PWID who engage in sharing equipment (sharers)) within three baseline chronic HCV (CHC) prevalence settings (30%, 45% and 60%), assuming a baseline HR coverage of 40%. We define sustainable elimination strategies, those that could maintain eliminations results for a decade (2031–2040), in the absence of additional treatment.ResultsThe model shows that the optimum elimination strategy is dependent on risk sharing behavior of the examined population. The necessary annual treatment coverage to achieve HCV elimination under 45% baseline CHC prevalence, without the simultaneous expansion of HR programs, ranges between 4.7–5.1%. Similarly, under 60% baseline CHC prevalence the needed treatment coverage varies from 9.0–10.5%. Increasing HR coverage from 40% to 75%, reduces the required treatment coverage by 6.5–9.8% and 11.0–15.0% under 45% or 60% CHC prevalence, respectively. In settings with ≤45% baseline CHC prevalence, expanding HR to 75% could prevent the disease from rebounding after elimination, irrespective of the type of the epidemic. In high chronic HCV prevalence, counseling interventions to reduce sharing are also needed to maintain the HCV incident cases in low levels.ConclusionsHarm reduction strategies have a vital role in HCV elimination strategy, as they reduce the required number of treatments to eliminate HCV and they provide sustainability after the elimination. The above underlines that HCV elimination strategies should be built upon the existing HR services, and argue for HR expansion in countries without services.

Highlights

  • People who inject drugs (PWID) represent the core of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemic in many high-income countries [1]

  • We considered two types of epidemic (with low (30%) and high (50%) proportion of people who inject drugs (PWID) who engage in sharing equipment) within three baseline chronic HCV (CHC) prevalence settings (30%, 45% and 60%), assuming a baseline harm reduction (HR) coverage of 40%

  • Harm reduction strategies have a vital role in HCV elimination strategy, as they reduce the required number of treatments to eliminate HCV and they provide sustainability after the elimination

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Summary

Introduction

People who inject drugs (PWID) represent the core of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemic in many high-income countries [1]. Significant advances in the antiviral treatment of HCV have improved the management of the infection, achieving high sustained viral response (SVR) rates (more than 90%) over a short duration of therapy (up to 12 weeks) [3, 4]. Elimination of hepatitis C virus (HCV) among people who inject drugs (PWID) is a costly investment, so strategies should focus on eliminating the disease, and on preventing disease resurgence. The aims of this study are to compute the minimum necessary antiviral therapies to achieve elimination with and without the additional expansion of harm reduction (HR) programs and to examine the sustainability of HCV elimination after 2030 if treatment is discontinued

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