News

Georgia launches HCV elimination program


 

References

With assistance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the country of Georgia has launched a hepatitis C elimination program aimed at reducing disease transmission and meeting increased demand for diagnosis and treatment, report Dr. Kiren Mitruka and coauthors in the July 24 CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Georgia has one of the world’s highest HCV prevalence rates, at 6.7%. To prepare for the launch of the program, efforts focused on describing HCV epidemiology, evaluating laboratory and health care capacity, and conducting program monitoring and evaluation, the report said.

A population-based serosurvey began in Georgia in May 2015, and seven sites have since opened to diagnose and treat HCV patients.

Results from the first phase of the program, which focused on improving access to affordable diagnostics and treatment for HCV patients with severe liver disease, found that 6,491 patients sought treatment and 6,177 (95.2%) initiated diagnostic work-up through July 3, 2015. Among these, 1,519 (24.6%) completed work-up, 1,474 (97.0%) of whom initiated treatment, the investigators reported.

Persisting challenges include the asymptomatic, chronic nature of HCV, which may result in delayed diagnosis, and ongoing transmission in health care settings and among hard to reach populations with the possibility of reinfection.

To address these obstacles, Georgia’s “comprehensive elimination plan” will cover advocacy, prevention, surveillance, testing, and access to care.

“Monitoring and evaluation will continue, and efforts are ongoing to develop an external QA/QC system to be used by laboratories to achieve and maintain biologic safety and quality diagnostic standards,” Dr. Mitruka and colleagues said.

“Georgia’s elimination program can provide information and experience that will assist similar efforts in other parts of the world,” the authors concluded.

Read the full report here: MMWR 2015 July 24.

Recommended Reading

WCD: As MRSA situation worsens, don’t overlook strep
MDedge Family Medicine
Oral cholera vaccine reduced incidence of disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Sepsis’ readmission costs dwarf heart attack, heart failure costs
MDedge Family Medicine
CAP shifting to viral disease as vaccines knock out bacterial causes
MDedge Family Medicine
Don’t defer antiretrovirals in asymptomatic HIV patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Ledipasvir plus sofosbuvir achieve excellent response in HCV/HIV coinfection
MDedge Family Medicine
Water woes: Recognizing and treating recreational water illness
MDedge Family Medicine
Dicloxacillin may cut INR levels in warfarin users
MDedge Family Medicine
Study describes possible antibiotics-JIA link
MDedge Family Medicine
Daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir safe and effective in HCV/HIV coinfection
MDedge Family Medicine