LSTM Home > LSTM Research > LSTM Online Archive

A new approach to prevent, diagnose, and treat hepatitis B in Africa

Spearman, C. Wendy, Andersson, Monique I., Bright, Bisi, Davwar, Pantong M., Desalegn, Hailemichael, Guingane, Alice Nanelin, Johannessen, Asgeir, Kabagambe, Kenneth, Lemoine, Maud, Matthews, Philippa C., Ndow, Gibril, Riches, Nicholas, Shimakawa, Yusuke, Sombié, Roger, Stockdale, Alexander J., Taljaard, Jantjie J., Vinikoor, Michael J., Wandeler, Gilles, Okeke, Edith and Sonderup, Mark (2023) 'A new approach to prevent, diagnose, and treat hepatitis B in Africa'. BMC Global and Public Health, Vol 1, Issue 1, e24.

[img]
Preview
Text
44263_2023_Article_26.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

There are 82 million people living with hepatitis B (PLWHB) in the World Health Organization Africa region, where it is the main cause of liver disease. Effective vaccines have been available for over 40 years, yet there are 990,000 new infections annually, due to limited implementation of hepatitis B birth dose vaccination and antenatal tenofovir prophylaxis for highly viraemic women, which could eliminate mother-to-child transmission. Despite effective and cheap antiviral treatment which can suppress hepatitis B virus replication and reduce the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), < 2% of PLWHB are diagnosed, and only 0.1% are treated. As a result, PLWHB are frequently diagnosed only when they have already developed decompensated cirrhosis and late-stage HCC, and consequently 80,000 hepatitis B-associated deaths occur each year. Major barriers include complex treatment guidelines which were derived from high-income settings, lack of affordable diagnostics, lack or insufficient domestic funding for hepatitis care, and limited healthcare infrastructure. Current treatment criteria may overlook patients at risk of cirrhosis and HCC. Therefore, expanded and simplified treatment criteria are needed. We advocate for decentralized community treatment programmes, adapted for low-resource and rural settings with limited laboratory infrastructure. We propose a strategy of treat-all except patients fulfilling criteria that suggest low risk of disease progression. Expanded treatment represents a financial challenge requiring concerted action from policy makers, industry, and international donor agencies. It is crucial to accelerate hepatitis B elimination plans, integrate hepatitis B care into existing healthcare programmes, and prioritize longitudinal and implementation research to improve care for PLWHB.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: WA Public Health > Preventive Medicine > WA 110 Prevention and control of communicable diseases. Transmission of infectious diseases
WC Communicable Diseases > Virus Diseases > Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers. Other Virus Diseases > WC 536 Human viral hepatitis
Faculty: Department: Clinical Sciences & International Health > Clinical Sciences Department
Clinical Sciences & International Health > International Public Health Department
Clinical Sciences & International Health > Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Programme (MLW)
Digital Object Identifer (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1186/s44263-023-00026-1
SWORD Depositor: JISC Pubrouter
Depositing User: JISC Pubrouter
Date Deposited: 06 Nov 2023 09:04
Last Modified: 06 Nov 2023 09:04
URI: https://archive.lstmed.ac.uk/id/eprint/23412

Statistics

View details

Actions (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item