Conference Coverage

VIDEO: U.S. hepatitis C treatment capacity falls short of need


 

AT THE LIVER MEETING 2015

References

SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. health care system’s capacity to treat patients who need hepatitis C treatment has improved since 2014, but it still falls far short of what’s needed, according to an analysis presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Despite recent improvements, it would still take at least 6 years to treat the majority of patients in need of hepatitis C therapy, explained Jagpreet Chhatwal, Ph.D., of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. “Even in the [direct-acting antiviral] era, the burden of hepatitis C remains substantial for a disease for which we have a cure.”

To predict trends in hepatitis C treatment, Dr. Chhatwal and his colleagues developed a mathematical model of health care factors, such as changing treatment regimens, screening policies, and widened insurance coverage.

“We wanted to put all of these different components together to project how the disease burden would change in the near future, and how the disease burden would look if we increased the treatment capacity for hepatitis C,” he said.

In an interview, Dr. Chhatwal discussed his findings and how capacity changes could affect the speed with which those in need receive necessary hepatitis C treatment.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

Invasive candidiasis hospitalizations down overall
MDedge Internal Medicine
Steroids did not reduce kidney injury in CABG
MDedge Internal Medicine
Therapeutic hypothermia after nonshockable-rhythm cardiac arrest
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Inappropriate hepatitis A, B tests may be widespread in hospitals
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Antigen test could simplify HCV screening
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Longer HCV therapy worked even after short-term failures
MDedge Internal Medicine
CTAD: Sigma-1 receptor agonist passes muster in small Alzheimer’s trial
MDedge Internal Medicine
CTAD: New aducanumab subanalysis bolsters phase III trials in very mild Alzheimer’s
MDedge Internal Medicine
AHA: Sacubitril/valsartan cuts heart failure hospital readmissions
MDedge Internal Medicine
Riociguat deemed suitable for PAH in connective tissue disease
MDedge Internal Medicine