Hepatitis C virus transmission among human immunodeficiency virus‐infected men who have sex with men: Modeling the effect of behavioral and treatment interventions
Adult
Male
Hepatitis C/epidemiology
Viral Hepatitis
610
HIV Infections/complications
610 Medicine & health
HIV Infections
Antiviral Agents
10234 Clinic for Infectious Diseases
Cohort Studies
Theoretical
Models
Behavior Therapy
info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/616
616
Prevalence
Humans
info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/613
Homosexuality, Male
ddc:613
ddc:616
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use
Incidence
Homosexuality
Adult; Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use; Behavior Therapy; Cohort Studies; HIV Infections/complications; HIV Infections/drug therapy; Hepatitis C/epidemiology; Hepatitis C/prevention & control; Hepatitis C/transmission; Homosexuality, Male; Humans; Incidence; Male; Models, Theoretical; Prevalence
Models, Theoretical
Hepatitis C
3. Good health
2721 Hepatology
Hepatitis C/epidemiology/prevention & control/transmission
HIV Infections/complications/drug therapy
DOI:
10.1002/hep.28769
Publication Date:
2016-08-17T09:08:45Z
AUTHORS (14)
ABSTRACT
The incidence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)‐infected men who have sex with men has increased in recent years and is associated with high‐risk sexual behavior. Behavioral interventions that target high‐risk behavior associated with HCV transmission and treatment with direct‐acting antivirals may prevent further HCV infections. We predicted the effect of behavioral and treatment interventions on HCV incidence and prevalence among HIV‐infected men who have sex with men up to 2030 using a HCV transmission model parameterized with data from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. We assessed behavioral interventions associated with further increase, stabilization, and decrease in the size of the population with high‐risk behavior. Treatment interventions included increase in treatment uptake and use of direct‐acting antivirals. If we assumed that without behavioral interventions high‐risk behavior spread further according to the trends observed over the last decade and that the treatment practice did not change, HCV incidence converged to 10.7/100 person‐years. All assessed behavioral interventions alone resulted in reduced HCV transmissions. Stabilization of high‐risk behavior combined with increased treatment uptake and the use of direct‐acting antivirals reduced incidence by 77% (from 2.2 in 2015 to 0.5/100 person‐years) and prevalence by 81% (from 4.8% in 2015 to 0.9%) over the next 15 years. Increasing treatment uptake was more effective than increasing treatment efficacy to reduce HCV incidence and prevalence. A decrease in high‐risk behavior led to a rapid decline in HCV incidence, independent of treatment interventions. Conclusion: Treatment interventions to curb the HCV epidemic among HIV‐infected men who have sex with men are effective if high‐risk behavior does not increase as it has during the last decade; reducing high‐risk behavior associated with HCV transmission would be the most effective intervention for controlling the HCV epidemic, even if this was not accompanied by an increase in treatment uptake or efficacy. (Hepatology 2016;64:1856‐1869).
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