Welcome to HCV Advocate’s hepatitis blog. The intent of this blog is to keep our website audience up-to-date on information about hepatitis and to answer some of our web site and training audience questions. People are encouraged to submit questions and post comments.

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Alan Franciscus

Editor-in-Chief

HCV Advocate



Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Legislature making progress against heroin plague

"The bill also allows local communities to choose to establish needle exchanges"

During the next few weeks, members of the Kentucky House and Senate will try to hammer out an agreement on a bill to address growing heroin abuse in Kentucky. Each chamber has passed its own measure.

The version that emerges will reflect whether legislators see the heroin epidemic as a criminal problem or a public health crisis, the term used by House Judiciary Committee chairman John Tilley, sponsor of the House bill.

Tilley, D-Hopkinsville, made an eloquent, informed and impassioned case that unless it's treated as a public health crisis, "we'll be digging ourselves out of this until we're all dead and gone."

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Could This Be The Biggest Advance in Hepatitis C since Gilead Sciences' Sovaldi?

Tiny biotech stock Achillion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ACHN ) reported what could be pretty big news for hepatitis C patients this week. The clinical stage biotechnology company released data showing that combining its ACH-3102 with Gilead Sciences' (NASDAQ: GILD ) Sovaldi achieved 100% cure rates in as little as six weeks of treatment. The success of that combination is prompting Achillion to launch a study of the two drugs over an even shorter 4-week dosing period. If that study pans out, it could be the biggest advance in hepatitis C treatment since Sovaldi won approval in 2013.

Read more....

Monday, February 16, 2015

Weekly Special Topic: Transmission and Prevention of Hepatitis C



Learn about how hepatitis C is transmitted and more importantly how to prevent transmission of hepatitis C with our newly updated fact sheets:

Transmission and Prevention of Hepatitis C.

   

The Global Spread of Genotype 1 —Alan Franciscus, Editor-in-Chief

The origin of hepatitis C (HCV) is unknown.  The current theory is that it may have originated in horses, but while the virus found in horses is similar to the hepatitis C virus the scientific evidence linking it to hepatitis C is far from clear.   Where the virus originated is on more solid ground—it is believed to have originated in West Africa.  Hepatitis C is spread by direct blood-to-blood contact.  So how did it develop into such a huge problem with an estimated 130-150 million people infected worldwide?  How did genotype 1 become the most common genotype worldwide?  The answer to both questions is well-known—blood transfusions and unsafe injections. 

In the study “The Global Spread of Hepatitis C Virus 1a and 1b:  A Phylodynamic and Phylogeographic Analysis,” by G Magiokinis et al., the authors used a complicated system of analysis with various models (molecular clock & the Bayesian skyline demographic).   The model tracked how genotype 1a and 1b spread throughout the world.  First it was found that genotype 1a had a steady rate of expansion from about 1906 through the 1960’s.  Moreover, it was found that from the 1960’s through the 1980’s it dramatically expanded.  This corresponds to the increase in injection drug use from the 1960’s through the present day. 

Genotype 1b on the other hand expanded at a steady rate from 1922 to the late 1940s.  Then from the 1950’s until the 1980s it showed the greatest expansion.  Thus, the highest rate of expansion of genotype 1b was ~16 years before genotype 1a.   An interesting observation was that early on in the hepatitis C epidemic it was thought that genotype 1b led to more cases of liver cancer.  A possible explanation of this is that people with genotype 1b were infected longer and were more likely to have had more disease progression.   As the authors pointed out, the connection between genotype 1b, liver cancer and the earlier spread of genotype 1b needs to be validated  in future studies. 

To validate their findings of the earlier expansion of genotype 1b, however, the authors pointed to other evidence: 
  • All US military recruit samples from 1948-1955 were genotype 1b.
  • Older HCV-infected individuals are “systematically” or consistently genotype 1b.
Back to why genotype 1 is the most common genotype.  The most likely reason is that genotype 1 was introduced into developed western countries and spread by the introduction of blood transfusions, plasma pooling and unsafe injections (reuse or improper needle sterilization) of medicines to treat many diseases.  In the late 1920s through the present day the epidemic of injection drug use and sharing needles and drug preparation tools is another reason for the spread of HCV genotype 1.  

One has to wonder how different it would be if genotype 2 had been ‘the genotype’ that had been the one that had greatly expanded instead of genotype 1.  Treatment of genotype 2 produced very high cure rate early on in the history of treatment.  Still with current treatments we have the potential to eradicate hepatitis C in a lifetime. If only we could increase treatment access for everyone with hepatitis C. 

Facts about genotype 1:
  • Genotype 1 is the most common genotype worldwide at 83.4 million (46.2%) people.
  • Genotype 1 is the most common genotype in the United States at 70% of the population with HCV.
  • Genotype 1a and 1b are the most common subtypes; subtypes 1c, d, e, f, g, h, i, k and l have been identified but are uncommon.
  • The current standard of care for the treatment of hepatitis C can cure 90 to 100% of people who take the medications (HARVONI and VIEKIRA PAK).  Treatment durations are usually 12 weeks but vary from 8 to 24 weeks.
http://hcvadvocate.org/news/newsLetter/2015/advocate0215_mid.html#1

Friday, February 13, 2015

Depression not linked to insulin resistance in patients with diabetes, HCV

Depression was not associated with peripheral insulin resistance among a cohort of patients with diabetes and hepatitis C virus infection, according to a study data published in the Journal of Viral Hepatitis.

Researchers enrolled 74 patients with diabetes (non-type 2) and HCV (mean age, 48 years) in the cross-sectional study and evaluated data after extensive comprehensive, clinical, histologic and metabolic testing to determine whether insulin resistance was associated with depression. Insulin was appraised through an insulin resistance test that measured steady-state plasma glucose and logistic regression analyses was used to evaluate predictors associated with depression, according to the research. 

“Depression was not associated with [insulin resistance] in our HCV-infected cohort,” the researchers concluded. “With the introduction of highly effective direct-acting anti-HCV treatments, the burden of HCV is anticipated to decrease significantly. However, considering the multifactorial nature of depression, interventions directed at other modifiable risk factors in at-risk individuals in this population are warranted.”

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Study: Door-to-door campaign linked hepatitis C patients to care

Effort overcame the many hurdles to specialized treatment for Philadelphia's medically underserved

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- In Philadelphia, as in many cities, neighborhoods with high rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) often also have limited access to screening and treatment. A new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine shows that when expert advocates made a focused effort in a medically underserved area, they were able to help vulnerable patients leap each of the many hurdles that often keep people out of care.

"This study demonstrates the importance of community-based testing for HCV in identifying previously undiagnosed individuals and re-engaging those aware of their diagnosis but not currently in care," Trooskin said. "We learned that a comprehensive approach to nonclinical testing is critical and must integrate immediate access to confirmatory testing as well as intensive patient navigation to effectively link patients to care. Although hepatitis C is now a curable disease, we identified new barriers to care such as the need for a referral to subspecialty care and challenges obtaining medication approval for patients, particularly those covered under Medicaid."

Read complete release here....

PCORI Announces $50 million in Hepatitis C Research Funding

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) research recently received a significant boost with a commitment of up to $50 million in funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) for comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) studies on the best ways to diagnose and treat HCV infection.  PCORI posted application materials earlier this month and announced a May 5, 2015 application deadline.

“HCV is a major health threat that can have devastating consequences for infected people and their families,” said PCORI Executive Director Joe Selby, MD, MPH, in a press release announcing the funding commitment. “Recently approved medications are immensely promising and offer vast improvements over previous therapies, but as yet there’s no ‘real-world’ evidence of their long-term effectiveness nor comparative evidence to help inform decisions about screening, diagnosis, and treatment of HCV.”

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