2014
DOI: 10.1111/jvh.12338
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HCVtreatment rates and sustained viral response among people who inject drugs in sevenUKsites: real world results and modelling of treatment impact

Abstract: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) antiviral treatment for people who inject drugs (PWID) could prevent onwards transmission and reduce chronic prevalence. We assessed current PWID treatment rates in seven UK settings and projected the potential impact of current and scaled-up treatment on HCV chronic prevalence. Data on number of PWID treated and sustained viral response rates (SVR) were collected from seven UK settings: Bristol (37–48% HCV chronic prevalence among PWID), East London (37–48%), Manchester (48–56%), Notti… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(79 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…Despite coverage being high in many settings, the projections also suggest that important benefits could still be achieved from scaling up NSP further, especially in settings with current low coverage levels. In addition, as suggested by other recent modelling analyses, 99,114 scaling up other interventions such as HCV infection treatment could also have a large impact on HCV transmission, although treatment will need to scale up considerably to see a large impact on incident infections. Importantly, strategies need to be devised to tackle or reduce the harms associated with homelessness and crack cocaine injection among PWID, which our modelling suggests is doubling the level of transmission in each setting.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Despite coverage being high in many settings, the projections also suggest that important benefits could still be achieved from scaling up NSP further, especially in settings with current low coverage levels. In addition, as suggested by other recent modelling analyses, 99,114 scaling up other interventions such as HCV infection treatment could also have a large impact on HCV transmission, although treatment will need to scale up considerably to see a large impact on incident infections. Importantly, strategies need to be devised to tackle or reduce the harms associated with homelessness and crack cocaine injection among PWID, which our modelling suggests is doubling the level of transmission in each setting.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Before 2015, we estimated the SVR rate for pegylated interferon and ribavirin from a recent study of PWID in the UK. 99 After 2015, we assumed that treatment would involve using the new direct-acting antiviral (DAA) drugs, and so assumed a high SVR rate of 90% for all genotypes. 103 Instantaneous HCV infection disease stage progression rates were calculated from a recent meta-analysis of PWID-specific progression probabilities to compensated cirrhosis 101 and a systematic review of general progression probabilities for other disease stages, 101 and, similarly, the spontaneous clearance probability came from a published meta-analysis.…”
Section: Model Parameterisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mathematical modelling suggests that substantial reductions in HCV incidence and prevalence could be achieved by targeted DAA treatment scale-up among those at the highest risk of ongoing transmission [6,16,77,78]. Using HCV treatment uptake data from seven sites in the UK, Martin et al demonstrated that treating 26 per 1000 HCV-infected PWID per annum with DAA therapy could achieve a 15-50% decrease in chronic HCV prevalence within 10 years [78].…”
Section: Mathematical Modelling: Treatment-as-prevention and The Impamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mathematical modelling suggests that substantial reductions in HCV incidence and prevalence could be achieved by targeted DAA treatment scale-up among those at the highest risk of ongoing transmission [6,16,77,78]. Using HCV treatment uptake data from seven sites in the UK, Martin et al demonstrated that treating 26 per 1000 HCV-infected PWID per annum with DAA therapy could achieve a 15-50% decrease in chronic HCV prevalence within 10 years [78]. Despite the high cost of DAA therapy, treating recent PWID and HIV-positive MSM with early liver disease appears to be cost-effective compared to delaying until cirrhosis, given the reduction in liver-related complications and additional benefit of averting secondary infections [7,8,79].…”
Section: Mathematical Modelling: Treatment-as-prevention and The Impamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This increase in chemsex led to the London Boroughs of Lambeth, Southwark and Lewisham commissioning the Chemsex Study. 23 It demonstrated that onequarter (all of whom were HIV positive) of those taking part in chemsex planned to engage in UPAI and one-third found it difficult to prevent engagement in STI transmission risk behaviour, which they subsequently regretted. Use of chemsex drugs was shown to be much more prevalent in these boroughs than the rest of London and more prevalent in London than the rest of the UK.…”
Section: The Impact Of Chemsexmentioning
confidence: 99%