Abstract

Despite the existence of effective prevention and treatment interventions, hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection continues to cause nearly 1 million deaths each year. WHO aspires to global control and elimination of HBV infection. We aimed to evaluate the potential impact of public health interventions against HBV, propose targets for reducing incidence and mortality, and identify the key developments required to achieve them. We developed a simulation model of the global HBV epidemic, incorporating data on the natural history of HBV, prevalence, mortality, vaccine coverage, treatment dynamics, and demographics. We estimate the impact of current interventions and scaling up of existing interventions for prevention of infection and introducing wide-scale population screening and treatment interventions on the worldwide epidemic. Vaccination of infants and neonates is already driving a large decrease in new infections; vaccination has already prevented 210 million new chronic infections by 2015 and will have averted 1·1 million deaths by 2030. However, without scale-up of existing interventions, our model showed that there will be a cumulative 63 million new cases of chronic infection and 17 million HBV-related deaths between 2015 and 2030 because of ongoing transmission in some regions and poor access to treatment for people already infected. A target of a 90% reduction in new chronic infections and 65% reduction in mortality could be achieved by scaling up the coverage of infant vaccination (to 90% of infants), birth-dose vaccination (to 80% of neonates), use of peripartum antivirals (to 80% of hepatitis B e antigen-positive mothers), and population-wide testing and treatment (to 80% of eligible people). These interventions would avert 7·3 million deaths between 2015 and 2030, including 1·5 million cases of cancer deaths. An elimination threshold for incidence of new chronic infections would be reached by 2090 worldwide. The annual cost would peak at US$7·5 billion worldwide ($3·4 billion in low-income and lower-middle-income countries), but decrease rapidly and this would be accelerated if a cure is developed. Scale-up of vaccination coverage, innovations in scalable options for prevention of mother-to-child transmission, and ambitious population-wide testing and treatment are needed to eliminate HBV as a major public health threat. Achievement of these targets could make a major contribution to one of the Sustainable Development Goals of combating hepatitis. Medical Research Council.

Highlights

  • In 2014, the World Health Assembly requested WHO to examine the feasibility of, and strategies needed for, the elimination of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections.1. This substantial political momentum is entirely proportionate to the estimated magnitude of the global burden, with viral hepatitis ranked as the seventh highest cause of mortality worldwide and responsible for 1·4 million deaths per year

  • Our results show that much progress has been made through vaccination, a scale-up of both prevention and treatment interventions is needed to reduce HBV as a public health threat

  • The model reproduces the global epidemiology of HBV well and several key epidemic patterns are noted: prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) is highest in west Africa, prevalence of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) tends to be higher in east Asian regions than in African regions, and the number of cancer deaths increases sharply with age and is highest in east Asia, www.thelancet.com/infection Vol 16 December 2016

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Summary

Introduction

In 2014, the World Health Assembly requested WHO to examine the feasibility of, and strategies needed for, the elimination of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. This substantial political momentum is entirely proportionate to the estimated magnitude of the global burden, with viral hepatitis ranked as the seventh highest cause of mortality worldwide and responsible for 1·4 million deaths per year (roughly 687 000 deaths due to HBV and 704 000 due to HCV). despite being similar in scale to the 1·29 million deaths annually due to HIV, 1·34 million annually due to tuberculosis, and 850 000 deaths annually due to malaria, viral hepatitis has been a relatively neglected area.4,5a wide range of interventions are available to prevent and treat HBV infection. In 2014, the World Health Assembly requested WHO to examine the feasibility of, and strategies needed for, the elimination of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections.. In 2014, the World Health Assembly requested WHO to examine the feasibility of, and strategies needed for, the elimination of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections.1 This substantial political momentum is entirely proportionate to the estimated magnitude of the global burden, with viral hepatitis ranked as the seventh highest cause of mortality worldwide and responsible for 1·4 million deaths per year (roughly 687 000 deaths due to HBV and 704 000 due to HCV).. Mother-to-child transmission at birth can be almost completely eliminated by the administration of birth-dose vaccination, intravenous hepatitis B immunoglobulin, and peripartum antiviral therapy for mothers with high viral load.. Childhood transmission can be prevented with a highly effective infant vaccine. Mother-to-child transmission at birth can be almost completely eliminated by the administration of birth-dose vaccination, intravenous hepatitis B immunoglobulin, and peripartum antiviral therapy for mothers with high viral load. For individuals who are already chronically infected with HBV, treatment with antivirals can suppress viral replication and substantially reduce the risk of progression to liver cirrhosis and liver cancer.

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