Conference Coverage

DDW: Significant worker productivity gains with newer hepatitis C drugs


 

FROM DDW 2015

References

Achieving a cure in hepatitis C infection could result in significant economic gains, with a study estimating that the beneficial effects in terms of improved worker productivity could total around $3.23 billion per year for the United States alone.

Researchers used data on work productivity and activity scores from patients enrolled in clinical trials of the all-oral sofosbuvir and lepidasvir combo to estimate the impact of achieving sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (SVR-12) on workers’ productivity.

They calculated an average work productivity loss of $4,954 for each employed patient with chronic hepatitis C infection per year in the United States and $1,129 per year for the five European Union countries included in the mix.

“These new all-oral combinations such as lepidasvir and sofosbuvir have cure rates between 95% and 99% with minimum side effects, [so] treating patients with these combinations results in improved work productivity, improved quality of life, and patient-reported outcomes that can translate into economic benefit,” Dr. Zobair M. Younossi of the Inova Fairfax Medical Campus, Falls Church, Va., said at the annual Digestive Disease Week.

No conflicts of interest were disclosed.

Recommended Reading

ILC: NAFLD a stealth trigger of hepatocellular carcinoma
MDedge Family Medicine
ILC: Liraglutide shows NASH benefit in small trial
MDedge Family Medicine
ILC: Europe issues hepatitis C treatment priority list
MDedge Family Medicine
ILC: Direct antivirals safely clear HCV despite ESRD
MDedge Family Medicine
Norovirus outbreak likely caused by swimming in infected waters
MDedge Family Medicine
Feds say that in screening colonoscopies, anesthesia comes with no charge
MDedge Family Medicine
PAS: Intestinal barrier altered by early feeding, antibiotic exposures
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA panel says duodenoscope reprocessing needs to be improved
MDedge Family Medicine
DDW: Statin use associated with significantly lower risk of new-onset IBD
MDedge Family Medicine
DDW: Biologic agents improve Crohn’s disease picture
MDedge Family Medicine