Abstract
The 69th World Health Assembly endorsed the Global Health Sector Strategy for Viral Hepatitis, embracing a goal to eliminate hepatitis infection as a public health threat by 2030. This was followed by the World Health Organization's (WHO) global targets for the care and management of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. These announcements and targets were important in raising awareness and calling for action; however, tracking countries’ progress towards these elimination goals has provided insights to the limitations of these targets. The existing targets compare a country's progress relative to its 2015 values, penalizing countries who started their programmes prior to 2015, countries with a young population, or countries with a low prevalence. We recommend that (1) WHO simplify the hepatitis elimination targets, (2) change to absolute targets and (3) allow countries to achieve these disease targets with their own service coverage initiatives that will have the maximum impact. The recommended targets are as follows: reduce HCV new chronic cases to ≤5 per 100 000, reduce HBV prevalence among 1-year-olds to ≤0.1%, reduce HBV and HCV mortality to ≤5 per 100 000, and demonstrate HBV and HCV year-to-year decrease in new HCV- and HBV-related HCC cases. The objective of our recommendations is not to lower expectations or diminish the hepatitis elimination standards, but to provide clearer targets that recognize the past and current elimination efforts by countries, help measure progress towards true elimination, and motivate other countries to follow suit.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 12-19 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Journal of Viral Hepatitis |
Volume | 28 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jan 2021 |
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In: Journal of Viral Hepatitis, Vol. 28, No. 1, 01.2021, p. 12-19.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - The case for simplifying and using absolute targets for viral hepatitis elimination goals
AU - Razavi, Homie
AU - Blach, Sarah
AU - Razavi-Shearer, Devin
AU - Abaalkhail, Faisal
AU - Abbas, Zaigham
AU - Abdallah, Ayat
AU - Abrao Ferreira, Paulo
AU - Abu Raddad, Laith Jamal
AU - Adda, Danjuma
AU - Agarwal, Kosh
AU - Aghemo, Alessio
AU - Ahmed, Aijaz
AU - Al-Busafi, Said A.
AU - Al-hamoudi, Waleed
AU - Al-Kaabi, Saad
AU - Al-Romaihi, Hamad
AU - Aljarallah, Badr
AU - AlNaamani, Khalid
AU - Alqahtani, Saleh
AU - Alswat, Khalid
AU - Altraif, Ibrahim
AU - Asselah, Tarik
AU - Bacon, Bruce
AU - Bessone, Fernando
AU - Bizri, Abdul Rahman
AU - Block, Tim
AU - Bonino, Ferruccio
AU - Brandão-Mello, Carlos Eduardo
AU - Brown, Kimberly
AU - Bruggmann, Philip
AU - Brunetto, Maurizia Rossana
AU - Buti, Maria
AU - Cabezas, Joaquín
AU - Calleja, Jose Luis
AU - Castro Batänjer, Erika
AU - Chan, Henry Lik Yuen
AU - Chang, Henry
AU - Chen, Chien Jen
AU - Christensen, Peer Brehm
AU - Chuang, Wan Long
AU - Cisneros, Laura
AU - Cohen, Chari
AU - Colombo, Massimo
AU - Conway, Brian
AU - Cooper, Curtis
AU - Craxi, Antonio
AU - Crespo, Javier
AU - Croes, Esther
AU - Cryer, Donna
AU - Cupertino de Barros, Fernando Passos
AU - Derbala, Moutaz
AU - Dillon, John
AU - Doss, Wahid
AU - Dou, Xiaoguang
AU - Doyle, Joseph
AU - Duberg, Ann Sofi
AU - Dugan, Ellen
AU - Dunn, Rick
AU - Dusheiko, Geoffrey
AU - El Khayat, Hisham
AU - El-Sayed, Manal H.
AU - Eshraghian, Ahad
AU - Esmat, Gamal
AU - Esteban Mur, Rafael
AU - Ezzat, Sameera
AU - Falconer, Karolin
AU - Fassio, Eduardo
AU - Ferrinho, Paulo
AU - Flamm, Steven
AU - Flisiak, Robert
AU - Foster, Graham
AU - Fung, James
AU - García-Samaniego, Javier
AU - Gish, Robert G.
AU - Gonçales, Fernando
AU - Halota, Waldemar
AU - Hamoudi, Waseem
AU - Hassany, Mohamed
AU - Hatzakis, Angelos
AU - Hay, Susan
AU - Himatt, Sayed
AU - Hoepelman, I. M.
AU - Hsu, Yao Chun
AU - Hui, Yee Tak
AU - Hunyady, Bela
AU - Jacobson, Ira
AU - Janjua, Naveed
AU - Janssen, Harry
AU - Jarcuska, Peter
AU - Kabagambe, Kenneth
AU - Kanto, Tatsuya
AU - Kao, Jia Horng
AU - Kaymakoglu, Sabahattin
AU - Kershenobich, David
AU - Khamis, Faryal
AU - Kim, Dong Joon
AU - Kim, Do Young
AU - Kondili, Loreta A.
AU - Kottilil, Shyamasundaran
AU - Kramvis, Anna
AU - Kugelmas, Marcelo
AU - Kurosaki, Masayuki
AU - Lacombe, Karine
AU - Lagging, Martin
AU - Lao, Wai Cheung
AU - Lavanchy, Daniel
AU - Lazarus, Jeffrey V.
AU - Lee, Alice
AU - Lee, Samual S.
AU - Levy, Miriam
AU - Liakina, Valentina
AU - Lim, Young Suk
AU - Liu, Shuang
AU - Maddrey, Willis
AU - Malekzadeh, Reza
AU - Marinho, Rui Tato
AU - Mathur, Poonam
AU - Maticic, Mojca
AU - Mendes Correa, Maria Cassia
AU - Mera, Jorge
AU - Merat, Shahin
AU - Mogawer, Sherif
AU - Mohamed, Rosmawati
AU - Muellhaupt, Beat
AU - Muljono, David
AU - Mostafa, Ibrahim
AU - Nahum, Mendez Sanchez
AU - Nawaz, Arif
AU - Negro, Francesco
AU - Ninburg, Michael
AU - Ning, Qing
AU - Ntiri- Reid, Boatemaa
AU - Nymadawa, Pagbajabyn
AU - Oevrehus, Anne
AU - Ormeci, Necati
AU - Orrego, Mauricio
AU - Osman, Alaa
AU - Oyunsuren, Tsendsuren
AU - Pan, Calvin
AU - Papaevangelou, Vassiliki
AU - Papatheodoridis, George
AU - Popping, Stephanie
AU - Prasad, Papu
AU - Prithiviputh, Rittoo
AU - Qureshi, Huma
AU - Ramji, Alnoor
AU - Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn
AU - Reddy, Rajender
AU - Remak, William
AU - Richter, Clemens
AU - Ridruejo, Ezequiel
AU - Robaeys, Geert
AU - Roberts, Stuart
AU - Roberts, Lewis
AU - Roudot-Thoraval, Françoise
AU - Saab, Sammy
AU - Said, Sanaa
AU - Salamat, Amjad
AU - Sanai, Faisal
AU - Sanchez-Avila, Juan Francisco
AU - Schiff, Eugene
AU - Schinazi, Raymond
AU - Sebastiani, Giada
AU - Seguin-Devaux, Carole
AU - Shanmugam, R. P.
AU - Sharara, Ala
AU - Shilton, Sonjelle
AU - Shouval, Daniel
AU - Sievert, William
AU - Simonova, Marieta
AU - Sohrabpour, Amir Ali
AU - Sonderup, Mark
AU - Soza, Alejandro
AU - Wendy Spearman, C.
AU - Steinfurth, Nancy
AU - Sulkowski, Mark
AU - Tan, Soek Siam
AU - Tanaka, Junko
AU - Tashi, Dhondup
AU - Thein, Hla Hla
AU - Thompson, Peyton
AU - Tolmane, Ieva
AU - Toy, Mehlika
AU - Valantinas, Jonas
AU - Van de Vijver, David
AU - Vélez-Möller, Patricia
AU - Vince, Adriana
AU - Waked, Imam
AU - Wang, Su
AU - Wedemeyer, Heiner
AU - Wong, Vincent
AU - Xie, Qing
AU - Yamada, Seiji
AU - Yang, Hwai I.
AU - Yesmembetov, Kakharman
AU - Yilmaz, Yusuf
AU - Younossi, Zobair
AU - Yu, Ming Lung
AU - Yuen, Man Fung
AU - Yurdaydin, Cihan
AU - Yusuf, Aasim
AU - Zekry, Amany
AU - Zeuzem, Stefan
AU - Polaris Observatory Collaborators
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - The 69th World Health Assembly endorsed the Global Health Sector Strategy for Viral Hepatitis, embracing a goal to eliminate hepatitis infection as a public health threat by 2030. This was followed by the World Health Organization's (WHO) global targets for the care and management of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. These announcements and targets were important in raising awareness and calling for action; however, tracking countries’ progress towards these elimination goals has provided insights to the limitations of these targets. The existing targets compare a country's progress relative to its 2015 values, penalizing countries who started their programmes prior to 2015, countries with a young population, or countries with a low prevalence. We recommend that (1) WHO simplify the hepatitis elimination targets, (2) change to absolute targets and (3) allow countries to achieve these disease targets with their own service coverage initiatives that will have the maximum impact. The recommended targets are as follows: reduce HCV new chronic cases to ≤5 per 100 000, reduce HBV prevalence among 1-year-olds to ≤0.1%, reduce HBV and HCV mortality to ≤5 per 100 000, and demonstrate HBV and HCV year-to-year decrease in new HCV- and HBV-related HCC cases. The objective of our recommendations is not to lower expectations or diminish the hepatitis elimination standards, but to provide clearer targets that recognize the past and current elimination efforts by countries, help measure progress towards true elimination, and motivate other countries to follow suit.
AB - The 69th World Health Assembly endorsed the Global Health Sector Strategy for Viral Hepatitis, embracing a goal to eliminate hepatitis infection as a public health threat by 2030. This was followed by the World Health Organization's (WHO) global targets for the care and management of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. These announcements and targets were important in raising awareness and calling for action; however, tracking countries’ progress towards these elimination goals has provided insights to the limitations of these targets. The existing targets compare a country's progress relative to its 2015 values, penalizing countries who started their programmes prior to 2015, countries with a young population, or countries with a low prevalence. We recommend that (1) WHO simplify the hepatitis elimination targets, (2) change to absolute targets and (3) allow countries to achieve these disease targets with their own service coverage initiatives that will have the maximum impact. The recommended targets are as follows: reduce HCV new chronic cases to ≤5 per 100 000, reduce HBV prevalence among 1-year-olds to ≤0.1%, reduce HBV and HCV mortality to ≤5 per 100 000, and demonstrate HBV and HCV year-to-year decrease in new HCV- and HBV-related HCC cases. The objective of our recommendations is not to lower expectations or diminish the hepatitis elimination standards, but to provide clearer targets that recognize the past and current elimination efforts by countries, help measure progress towards true elimination, and motivate other countries to follow suit.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85098674981&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jvh.13412
DO - 10.1111/jvh.13412
M3 - Article
C2 - 32979881
AN - SCOPUS:85098674981
SN - 1352-0504
VL - 28
SP - 12
EP - 19
JO - Journal of Viral Hepatitis
JF - Journal of Viral Hepatitis
IS - 1
ER -