Professor Sievert |
In a letter to the Medical Journal of Australia
published today, a leading Monash researcher is asking for hepatitis C virus
patients to gain improved access to drugs to avert liver related deaths.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a major public health
burden in Australia, with estimates of 230,000 people chronically infected.
HCV is a significant cause of advanced liver diseases
including progressive liver fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma
(liver cancer).
Fortunately, there is a revolution in HCV treatment with the
advent of new drugs, known as direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy.
“During this decade, simple (oral tablets rather than
injections), tolerable, short duration (6-12 weeks) therapy with extremely high
efficacy (cure rates above 90%) should become the norm for the HCV-infected population,” said lead author
and Director, Gastroenterology and Hepatology Unit at Monash Health and Monash University
Professor of Medicine William Sievert.
“However, the high cost of DAA regimens and competing public
health priorities may limit the potential impact of new HCV therapies.”
Currently, the cost of DAA treatment is out of reach for
most HCV patients.
“The large number of liver-related deaths every year caused
by HCV places an enormous burden on our health system,” said Professor Sievert.
“Our research team modelled how the HCV disease burden and
associated health care costs in Australia will increase as the infected
population ages.”
“We demonstrated that increasing the efficacy of antiviral
therapy and the number of patients treated could avert the expected increase in
HCV liver related deaths and end stage liver disease.”
Importantly, compared to previous regimens, DAA therapies
offer higher cure rates, simplified dosing, shorter treatment duration and are
better tolerated, albeit at a substantial price.
Professor Sievert’s team examined the impact of delayed
access to DAA treatment by modelling one and two year delays.
“We estimate that if the current treatment regimens continue
in Australia, there will be approximately 22,200 liver related deaths between
2014 and 2030,” said Professor Sievert.
“However, if DAA treatment is made widely available and
accessible through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS), that number of
deaths will decrease to 13,500 in the same time period.”
Alarmingly, for every year of DAA treatment delay, thousands
of HCV infected patients will die or develop advanced liver disease.
“If we delay just one year, there will be an extra 900 liver
related deaths, 800 new cases of cirrhosis and 500 new cases of liver cancer.”
“These staggering numbers double if we wait for two years.”
“We believe it is critical to provide patients with access to
highly effective treatment to cure HCV infection without delay in order to
diminish future HCV-related morbidity and mortality,” added Professor Sievert.
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