TY - JOUR
T1 - Hepatitis C prevalence and elimination planning in Pakistan, a bottom-up approach accounting for provincial variation
AU - Mooneyhan, Ellen
AU - Qureshi, Huma
AU - Mahmood, Hassan
AU - Tariq, Muhammad
AU - Maqbool, Nabeel Ahmed
AU - Anwar, Masood
AU - Aslam, Mujahid
AU - Azam, Farooq
AU - Blach, Sarah
AU - Khan, Aamir Ghafoor
AU - Hamid, Saeed
AU - Hussain, Tanweer
AU - Akhter, Mohammad Khalil
AU - Khan, Ambreen
AU - Khan, Uzma
AU - Khowaja, Saira
AU - Mahmood, Khalid
AU - Mazhar, Samra
AU - Nawaz, Ahmad
AU - Rose, Ayub
AU - Ghorezai, Gul Sabeen Azam
AU - Shah, Sabeen
AU - Sarwar, Syeda Zahida
AU - Razavi, Homie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023/4
Y1 - 2023/4
N2 - In Pakistan, substantial changes to hepatitis C virus (HCV) programming and treatment have occurred since the 2008 nationwide serosurvey estimated a 4.8% anti-HCV prevalence. In the absence of an updated national study, this analysis uses provincial data to estimate a national prevalence and the interventions needed to achieve elimination. Using a Delphi process, epidemiologic HCV data for the four provinces of Pakistan (accounting for 97% of the population) were reviewed with 21 subject-matter experts in Pakistan. Province-level estimates were inputted into a mathematical model to estimate the national HCV disease burden in the absence of intervention (Base), and if the World Health Organization (WHO) elimination targets are achieved by 2030 (80% reduction in new infections, 90% diagnosis coverage, 80% treatment coverage, and 65% reduction in mortality: WHO Elimination). An estimated 9,746,000 (7,573,000–10,006,000) Pakistanis were living with viraemic HCV as of January 1, 2021; a viraemic prevalence of 4.3% (3.3–4.4). WHO Elimination would require an annual average of 18.8 million screens, 1.1 million treatments, and 46,700 new infections prevented anually between 2022 and 2030. Elimination would reduce total infections by 7,045,000, save 152,000 lives and prevent 104,000 incident cases of hepatocellular carcinoma from 2015 to 2030. Blood surveys, programmatic data, and expert panel input uncovered more HCV infections and lower treatment numbers in the provinces than estimated using national extrapolations, demonstrating the benefits of a bottom-up approach. Screening and treatment must increase 20 times and 5 times, respectively, to curb the HCV epidemic in Pakistan and achieve elimination by 2030.
AB - In Pakistan, substantial changes to hepatitis C virus (HCV) programming and treatment have occurred since the 2008 nationwide serosurvey estimated a 4.8% anti-HCV prevalence. In the absence of an updated national study, this analysis uses provincial data to estimate a national prevalence and the interventions needed to achieve elimination. Using a Delphi process, epidemiologic HCV data for the four provinces of Pakistan (accounting for 97% of the population) were reviewed with 21 subject-matter experts in Pakistan. Province-level estimates were inputted into a mathematical model to estimate the national HCV disease burden in the absence of intervention (Base), and if the World Health Organization (WHO) elimination targets are achieved by 2030 (80% reduction in new infections, 90% diagnosis coverage, 80% treatment coverage, and 65% reduction in mortality: WHO Elimination). An estimated 9,746,000 (7,573,000–10,006,000) Pakistanis were living with viraemic HCV as of January 1, 2021; a viraemic prevalence of 4.3% (3.3–4.4). WHO Elimination would require an annual average of 18.8 million screens, 1.1 million treatments, and 46,700 new infections prevented anually between 2022 and 2030. Elimination would reduce total infections by 7,045,000, save 152,000 lives and prevent 104,000 incident cases of hepatocellular carcinoma from 2015 to 2030. Blood surveys, programmatic data, and expert panel input uncovered more HCV infections and lower treatment numbers in the provinces than estimated using national extrapolations, demonstrating the benefits of a bottom-up approach. Screening and treatment must increase 20 times and 5 times, respectively, to curb the HCV epidemic in Pakistan and achieve elimination by 2030.
KW - Pakistan
KW - cascade of care
KW - elimination
KW - hepatitis C
KW - prevalence
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85147414453
U2 - 10.1111/jvh.13802
DO - 10.1111/jvh.13802
M3 - Article
C2 - 36650932
AN - SCOPUS:85147414453
SN - 1352-0504
VL - 30
SP - 345
EP - 354
JO - Journal of Viral Hepatitis
JF - Journal of Viral Hepatitis
IS - 4
ER -