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Review
. 2015 Sep;10(5):369-73.
doi: 10.1097/COH.0000000000000180.

Simplified diagnostic monitoring for hepatitis C, in the new era of direct-acting antiviral treatment

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Review

Simplified diagnostic monitoring for hepatitis C, in the new era of direct-acting antiviral treatment

Jennifer Cohn et al. Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 2015 Sep.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Approximately 150-175 million people are infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). Until very recently, the complexity, cost and poor efficacy and tolerability of pegylated interferon and ribavirin (PEG-RBV) treatment have hindered scale up in low-income and middle-income countries (L&MICs). Similarly, the diagnostic and monitoring algorithm associated with PEG-RBV has been expensive and complicated because of the poor efficacy and frequency of adverse drug effects of PEG-RBV therapy. This article provides an overview of the potential changes to the diagnosis and monitoring algorithm and describes key promising tools in the diagnostics pipeline.

Recent findings: Interferon-free direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy sets the stage to significantly simplify laboratory requirements and make the overall diagnostic package much less expensive. Diagnostic simplification and cost-reduction will be key to enable implementation of HCV screening and treatment in L&MICs.

Summary: There is the potential to introduce simplified monitoring for hepatitis C. Antigen testing could be used as a replacement for HCV RNA PCR tests, to establish active infection and then to prove cure after stopping DAA treatment. If new DAA treatments can be shown to be pan-genotypic, genotyping may no longer be required.

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