CCCHAP-MN HEPATITIS
UPDATE Presented by Cheri Booth, MPH
MN Department of HealthNovember 22, 2013
WHAT IS HEPATITIS?• What is it caused by• How is it spread• Who is most affected• What are the outcomes?
WHAT CAUSES HEPATITIS?
Hepatitis is basically inflammation of the liver. (hepat-) = liver, (-itis) =
inflammation Many things can cause hepatitis:
Caused by viruses, alcohol, medications, and other toxins
Can also be caused by genetic conditions or co-morbidities
HOW IS HEPATITIS SPREAD VIRAL hepatitis is spread from person to
person or from the environment. Exactly how depends on which hepatitis virus. Hepatitis A – food borne, and to a much
smaller degree sexual or IDU Hepatitis B- blood, sex, perinatal Hepatitis C (has 24 different genotypes!)
Blood, and to a much smaller degree perinatal or sexual
Hepatitis D- ‘piggy back virus’- blood, sexual Hepatitis E- same as type A Hepatitis G- very similar to ‘C’
WHO IS MOST AFFECTED? HBV- In MN it is primarily persons born in
endemic areas who relocate here. Transmission often occurs at birth. Or in early adulthood by blood, sexual contact, or unsterilized/ contaminated medical supplies.
HCV- Approx 5.5 million Americans infected. Highest prevalence is among ‘Baby Boomers’. Related to blood exposures such as transfusion in the
days before the virus was isolated as well as military exposures.
Most aren’t aware of status. HCV- Greatest incidence is among persons who
inject drugs. More often in <30’s. Related to opioid addiction and injection use trends.
OUTCOMES HBV- If infected at birth or in childhood
outcome is nearly always chronic infection. Adults tend to clear the virus in 85% of infections. High rates of cirrhosis and liver cancer for chronically infected.
HCV- Majority of those infected become chronic cases (~70%). Greatest indicator for liver transplant in the US. Most with lifelong infection will develop some level of fibrosis and or cirrhosis. Liver cancer rates rising dramatically.
HEP C IN MN• How many Minnesotans are
affected by HCV• Which populations or locations
are experiences higher burden of infection?
HCV INFECTED PERSONS IDENTIFIED THROUGH PASSIVE SURVEILLANCE IN MN THROUGH 2012
**http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hepatitis/c/fact.htm
*Includes all acute, chronic, probable chronic, and resolved cases.
HCV infected persons* identified through passive surveillance
Estimated unidentified HCV infected persons
39,303
45,559
N=84,863**
Data Source: MN Viral Hepatitis Surveillance System
PERSONS LIVING WITH HCV IN MN BY AGE, 2012
Median Age: 55
Data Source: MN Viral Hepatitis Surveillance System
*Includes anonymous methadone patients
PERSONS LIVING HCV IN MN
BY GENDER*, 2012
Data Source: MN Viral Hepatitis Surveillance System
PERSONS LIVING WITH CHRONIC HCV IN MINNESOTA BY RACE, 2012
Afr Amer = African American /Black Asian=Asian or Pacific IslanderAmer Ind = American IndianOther = Multi-racial persons or persons with other race
PERSONS LIVING WITH HCV IN MN
RATES (PER 100,000 PERSONS*), 2012
*Rates calculated using 2010 U.S. Census data
Excludes persons with multiple races or unknown race
Data Source: MN Viral Hepatitis Surveillance System
TRENDS IN HEPATITIS C IN THE US Young (under 30) people have had a
significant increase in rate of HCV infection.
Future implications related to morbidity and mortality, perinatal transmission of HCV, and treatment costs.
Opioid addiction and heroin purity in MN leading to greater issues of addiction, unsafe injection behavior, and overdose.
INCREASING MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY RELATED TO HEPATITIS C
HCV is a major cause of liver disease– Leading indication for liver transplantation– Leading cause of hepatocellular carcinoma
(HCC) (approx.50% of HCC incidence) Over the next 40-50 years, a projected:
– 1.76 million with untreated HCV infection will develop cirrhosis– 400,000 will develop HCC– 1 million will dies from HCV-related complications
Substantial HCV-related costs1– Exceeds $5 billion annually– 2010-2019 estimated costs total $54.2 billion
1 McGarry et al. “Economic Model of a Birth Cohort Screening program for Hepatitis C” Hepatology 2012; 55:1344-1355
TAKING ACTIONThe role of community planning/ HIV advisory committees in the fight against viral hepatitis
HIV AND HCV- IF THE SHOE FITS…. Natural cross-over between populations
affected and how prevention and linkage to care work is done.
Ability to enhance existing services rather than recreate them. PCSI opportunity!
Rapid HCV test allows alignment with current HIV testing strategies and programs
Advocacy/ provision of care around hepatitis C testing and referral often strengthens inroads into difficult to reach populations in need of HIV services.
INCORPORATION OF HEPATITIS Many states have incorporated Hepatitis into
their HIV community planning groups. Logical fit based on population overlaps,
funding goals, and federal imperative to incorporate/ collaborate services.
Challenging to operate even one advisory group. Adding a second would be a burden to communities already finding it difficult to participate.
Precedence and trend toward combining groups is seen across the nation. CDC, NASTAD NY, CA, MA, TX, CO, DE, VT, etc………………………..
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