Title: The%20Global%20Burden%20of%20Hepatitis%20C
1 The Global Burden of Hepatitis C Dr Daniel
Lavanchy World Health Organization (WHO) Geneva,
Switzerland 3rd Paris Hepatitis Conference
2Global Burden of Disease
- For centuries, mankind helpless against
infectious diseases - Germ theory identification of microbes as
causative agents led to the development of
vaccines and antimicrobials - Optimists at the end of the 19th century
predicted eradication of infectious diseases - 1950s, complacency set in with widespread use of
penicillin, development of polio vaccines and
discovery of drugs for tuberculosis - 1967, US Surgeon General stated that the war
against infectious diseases has been won - 1981, Richard Krause, director US NIAlD warned
that microbial diversity and evolutionary vigor
were still forces threatening mankind
3Global Burden of Disease
4Global Burden of Disease
- About 15 million (gt25) of 57 million annual
deaths worldwide are estimated to be related
directly to infectious diseases - This figure does not include the deaths that
occur as a consequence of complications
associated with chronic infections, such as liver
failure and hepatocellular carcinoma in people
infected with hepatitis B or C viruses
5End-stage Liver Disease
- Cirrhosis gt 783'000 deaths / year
- Liver cancer gt 619'000 deaths / year
- 1 of every 40 death worldwide
- But no good breakdown according to aetiology
6Hepatitis C Global Burden
- WHO estimates
- 2.3 - 4.7 millions new infections/year
- 300'000 deaths annually
- 130-170 million persons chronically infected
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8Impact of HCC
- US national spending each year on HCC
- 32,907 / case
- total annual burden 454.9 million
- (Lang et al. 2009)
- Interventions to reduce the prevalence of HCC
have the potential to yield sizable economic
benefits - Screening and treatment programs aimed at
reducing viral hepatitis-related morbidity will
reduce hospitalization rates
9European region
- Hepatitis C is a major public health problem in
the WHO European region, costing twice as many
lives and about as many healthy live years as
HIV/AIDS. - Burden of disease caused by advanced disease
highlights the potential benefit of antiviral
treatment. - Varying transplantation and mortality rates
suggest inequality of health care services across
Europe. - Most importantly, the lack of data indicates that
hepatitis C still is a neglected disease. - What is needed are PUBLIC AWARENESS, coordinated
action plans, more and better data.
10Global Burden Basics
- Global data
- Little more has been done at country level since
first WHO estimates in 1997 - 38 different HCV surveillance systems in 27 EU
countries (Rantala 2008) - Anti-HCV gt RNA positive confirmed in 40-90
- EMCCDA. Annual report 2006
11Hepatitis C Incidence
12Forecasted cases of hepatitis C for 20012040
13Health care costs associated with hepatitis C for
20012040
14Predicted HCV Related Deaths
Predictions are difficult, Particularly about
the future
Yogi Berra
15HCV Related Mortality USA
Wise, 2008
16Global Hepatitis C Epidemic
- Prevalence data still not available in many
countries - prevalence studies of the general population
needed for an accurate estimate of the rate of
infection and the number of individuals
chronically infected - Detection of outbreaks of HCV infection difficult
- Incidence impossible to measure
- Under-reporting (20-50)
- Long-term disease burden outcome not yet known
- Heterogeneity in availability/quality of data
17Summary
- Lack of disease burden data
- Lack of awareness
- Political commitment difficult
- Holistic strategy for prevention, control
management of hepatitis A, B, C (E) - Set clear, quantifiable targets for
- reducing incidence and prevalence
- reducing morbidity mortality
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19Global Public Health Goals
- Public recognition as important public health
issue - Government lead for a national strategy
- for awareness raising, screening, diagnosis,
referral and treatment - If public health does not lead, who should lead ?
- Google ? Industry? Doctors? Rock stars? Media?
- Coordinated approach globally
- Globally involve advocacy groups, professionals
and scientific societies
20Conclusions
- Heavy global burden assessment behind schedule
- no global data
- few good national estimates
- WHO work in progress
- Standardized approach is essential
- Implementation of comprehensive national programs
still needed in 2008 global political agenda
with clear targets - Research is necessary to define best practices
- Global team effort necessary
21Hepatitis C Vaccine
- Investigational E1E2/MF59 vaccine (Novartis)
- Correlates of protection are complex
- Future development ?
- Urgent !
22Thank you
www.who.int http//www.who.int/topics/hepatitis/
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