Archive for the ‘Virus Killer’ Category

Baby Boomers: Testing for Hepatitis C Virus Could Save Your Life

A 2 percent prevalence of hepatitis C virus emerged recently in the U.S. adult population and this prevalence translates to an estimated 4.1 million persons in the U.S. Fifty percent of the cases arise in the Baby Boomers age group born between 1945 and 1964. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention portrays hepatitis C viral infection as causing more deaths than HIV in the United States. Hepatitis C caused about 13,000 deaths in 2005 and the CDC projects the number of deaths to rise to 35,000 by 2030.

A blood test for antibodies to hepatitis C virus uncovers new cases of the disease. Since 20 to 30 years can elapse before symptoms arise, "silent killer" describes the disease. The HCV infection represents a principal cause of liver disease, cirrhosis and death. Many individuals remain unaware of the infection and the burden of the disease will continue to rise unless emphasis switches to detection, education and treatment for the Baby Boomer age group.

Rein and colleagues from the University of Chicago published in the Feb. 21 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine results of a study using a computer model to estimate how screening the Baby Boomer age group would reduce deaths significantly. The projected estimated cost shrinks to 50 percent less with utilization of this new method for screening and early treatment.

The Chronic Liver Disease Foundation supports expansion of the HCV screening for individuals in the Baby Boomer age group. The Foundation issued a position paper in support of the research results. The CDC at present recommends screening for high-risk groups only such as individuals with a history of injecting drugs, requiring blood transfusion before 1992 or receiving chronic kidney hemodialysis.

The Peer Review Committee at CDC is currently reviewing the research to determine a decision about this new concept. As required by federal law, the public can access review information at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention website.

References

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2006) The Prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus Infection in the United States. Annals of Internal Medicine, 144(10):705-714.

Rein, D.B. et al. (2012) The Cost-Effectiveness of Birth-Cohort Screening for Hepatitis C Antibody in U.S. Primary Care Settings. Annals of Internal Medicine, 156(4):263-270.

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Baby Boomers: Testing for Hepatitis C Virus Could Save Your Life

Hepatitis C, a Leading Killer, Is Frequently Undiagnosed But Often Curable

By Jeffrey Norris on February 23, 2012

Alex Monto, MD

Hepatitis C virus — not AIDS-causing HIV — is the leading chronic virus infection leading to death in the United States, and its victims most often are baby boomers. More than half who are infected do not know it.

Researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found in a study published in the February 21 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine that hepatitis C had overtaken HIV as a cause of death in the United States by 2007.

Deaths in the United States due to HIV infection have been steadily decreasing, and  dropped below 13,000 in 2007, while deaths from hepatitis C infection have been steadily increasing, first surpassing 15,000 per year in 2007.

The good news, according to UCSF liver specialist Alex Monto, MD, is that there has been progress in fighting both diseases, and the kinds of drug combination strategies that have done so much to transform HIV infection from a death sentence to a manageable disease are poised to further boost cure rates for those infected with hepatitis C.

“We know that not enough people with risk factors get tested,” Monto says. “There are a lot of people walking around with hepatitis C who don’t know it.”

Monto directs the liver clinic at the UCSF-affiliated San Francisco Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center, one of four hepatitis C centers nationally within the VA system. Like boomers, veterans are disproportionately affected by hepatitis C. The VA cares for 165,000 patients who are chronically infected with the virus.

Three Million in U.S. Diagnosed with Hep C

Chronic Hepatitis C has been diagnosed in about three million people in the United States. It often causes no symptoms, and many who have been infected for years or even decades may remain unaware of it until symptoms finally appear. The ultimate cause of death attributable to chronic infection is cirrhosis or liver cancer, although the disease progresses to cirrhosis in fewer than half of cases. There is no vaccine.

“The main risk factor in the United States is past injection-drug use,” Monto says. “The others most at risk are those who received blood transfusions before 1992,” Monto says, referring to the year when high-quality screening of the blood supply was implemented.

Compared to HIV or hepatitis B, the risk of hepatitis C being transmitted by sex is low, Monto says, but among men who have sex with men there has been an increase in reports of the virus being sexually transmitted, more so among those who are infected with HIV.

“Anybody with a history of ever being exposed to injection drugs or who received a transfusion before the blood supply was screened should be tested,” Monto says. “That’s not controversial at all. What has been controversial is whether or not all baby boomers should be screened.”

Another study in this week’s edition of the journal suggests that a one-time blood test ordered by primary care providers to screen for antibodies to hepatitis C in those born between 1945 and 1965 would be cost effective — costing $2,874 for each chronically infected patient identified — and would lead to the identification of more than 800,000 previously undiagnosed cases.

Those who are chronically infected may be able to reduce the likelihood of disease progression by avoiding alcohol, by maintaining a healthy weight, and by being vaccinated against hepatitis A and hepatitis B, Monto says.

Treatment Often Cures Hepatitis C

About four out of five who are infected do not rid themselves of the virus without treatment. For about a decade the standard treatment was a combination of two drugs — pegylated interferon given once per week by subcutaneous injection, and daily ribavirin pills, with treatment lasting from six to 11 months. This treatment represented a vast improvement — offering cure rates of 40 percent to 50 percent in most patients, according to Monto.

Hepatitis C virus. Image by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

Within the past year two new drugs of a type known as protease inhibitors have become available. These are valuable for the 75 percent of U.S. hepatitis C patients infected with a form of the virus called genotype 1. With the protease inhibitors added to the mix, the duration of treatment may be shorter, and the cure rate has increased to about 70 percent in patients who have not previously been treated, Monto says. A cure may be less likely for those who have been previously treated, depending on how they responded to earlier treatment.

“New therapies are clearly getting better, and there are probably 25 to 30 new drugs in the pipeline, with many coming out in the next few years,” Monto says. “There are going to be drugs that are better than the ones we have so far.” Several UCSF researchers, including Monto, are helping to evaluate new drugs in clinical trials. UCSF researchers also are investigating the role of the immune system in hepatitis C and hepatitis B infection.

Not to Be Confused with Hepatitis B

Hepatitis B chronically infects about half as many as hepatitis C in the United States, and hits those of Asian descent especially hard — they account for half of hepatitis B infections. Hepatitis B is responsible for about 1,800 deaths yearly in the United States.

Despite the similar names, the two viruses are not closely related. Hepatitis B is spread much more easily through sexual intercourse, and passes from mother to newborn child much more easily. In most adults who become infected the immune system successfully controls infection. Only about five percent of adults exposed to hepatitis B become chronically infected, according to Monto.

There are vaccines for hepatitis B. A UCSF laboratory team led by William Rutter, PhD, now professor emeritus, first demonstrated that an uncontaminated source of material for a hepatitis B vaccine could be obtained by mass-producing viral proteins in genetically engineered, laboratory-grown yeast. This was the groundwork leading to the first marketed genetically engineered vaccine, made by Chiron, a company co-founded by Rutter.

Related Links:

The Increasing Burden of Mortality From Viral Hepatitis in the United States Between 1999 and 2007

The Cost-Effectiveness of Birth-Cohort Screening for Hepatitis C Antibody in U.S. Primary Care Settings

UCSF Liver Center

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Hepatitis C, a Leading Killer, Is Frequently Undiagnosed But Often Curable

Hepatitis C killing more Americans than HIV: studies

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Hepatitis C has surpassed HIV as a killer of U.S. adults, and screening all "baby boomers" could be one way to stem the problem, according to two new government studies.

Hepatitis C is a liver infection caused by a virus of the same name that is usually passed through contact with infected blood. An estimated 75 to 85 percent of infections become chronic, which can eventually cause serious diseases like cirrhosis (scarring of the liver) and liver cancer.

In one of the new studies, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that by 2007, hepatitis C was killing more Americans than HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS.

In 2007, hepatitis C killed 15,100 Americans, accounting for 0.6 percent of all deaths that year. That compared with a little over 12,700 deaths related to HIV.

Those numbers are based on death certificates, and almost certainly underestimate the real scope, according to the CDC. Compared with HIV, hepatitis C infection is more likely to still be unrecognized at the time of a person's death.

"Hepatitis C mortality has, regrettably, been on the rise for a number of years," said Dr. John Ward, director of the CDC's viral hepatitis division and an author of the new study.

But, he told Reuters Health, "many of those deaths could be prevented."

Of the estimated 3.2 million Americans with chronic hepatitis infection, about half of them don't know it, according to the CDC.

That's because the initial infection causes no symptoms in most cases. Instead, the virus silently damages the liver over the years, and people may only discover they are infected when they develop irreversible liver cirrhosis.

Chronic hepatitis C is most common in "baby boomers" -- about two thirds of U.S. infections are in people born between 1945 and 1964, Ward's team notes in their report, which is published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

That predominance among boomers has a lot to do with casual injection-drug use back in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, since sharing tainted needles is a major route for passing on the virus.

Some people also contracted hepatitis C through blood transfusions during that era. Since 1992, all blood donations in the U.S. have been tested for hepatitis C.

Baby boomers with hepatitis C are now getting to an age where the consequences of the infection would be evident, said Dr. Harvey Alter, a researcher with the National Institutes of Health who wrote an editorial on the new studies.

"The big issue is that most people with chronic infection are still not identified," Alter told Reuters Health.

Right now, health officials recommend that certain people at increased risk have blood tests to be screened for hepatitis C. That includes anyone who's used injection drugs, people who received blood transfusions or organ transplants before 1992 and people with HIV.

"But that approach hasn't been very effective," Alter said.

Another option, Ward said, would be to screen all baby boomers.

Experts are only seriously considering that option now because of recent advances in hepatitis C treatment.

Before 1990, the infection was virtually incurable. Then researchers found that a combination of two medicines, interferon and ribavirin, could boost the cure rate to 45 percent ("cure" meaning the virus is cleared from the body).

The downside is that the regimen is hard to take. Interferon has to be injected, and the whole treatment course takes about a year. The drugs can also have side effects ranging from flu-like symptoms to sleep problems to depression.

Less than a year ago, the U.S. approved two new oral drugs that, when added to the old regimen, send the cure rate to 70 percent. Adding either one of the drugs -- boceprevir (sold as Victrelis in the U.S.) or telaprevir (Incivek in the U.S.) -- can also cut the treatment time to about six months in some people.

The side effects are still there with the triple-drug approach. But with the high possibility of a cure, more people with chronic hepatitis C may want treatment, both Ward and Alter said.

So in a second study, the CDC researchers estimated the cost-effectiveness of doing one-time hepatitis C screening in all Americans born between 1945 and 1965.

They calculated that compared with the "status quo," screening baby boomers would catch an extra 808,580 cases of hepatitis C, at a cost of almost $2,900 for each one.

Ultimately, screening would prevent an extra 82,000 deaths, the CDC estimates -- assuming a certain percentage of people agree to treatment with interferon and ribavirin.

As far as cost-effectiveness, Ward said, that would put baby-boomer screening in line with other widely accepted types of screening, like tests for colon cancer and high blood pressure.

If screened people received one of the new hepatitis C drugs, that would save even more lives -- an additional 121,000 over current screening policy, the CDC says. But the cost would be greater, since both new drugs are very expensive.

Incivek costs nearly $50,000 for the whole course, while Victrelis rings up at roughly $26,000 to $48,000 depending on the duration of treatment.

Still, Alter, who supports baby boomer screening, said the approach looks to be "very cost-effective" -- especially when compared to the costs of treating cirrhosis and liver cancer, which are the most common reasons for liver transplants.

"The beauty of this is, it's six months to one year of treatment," Alter said.

Both Alter and Ward also pointed to other medications now in the drug industry's pipeline that are aimed at taking interferon injections out of the equation.

"Hopefully, we'll soon have oral therapies that are easier to take and have fewer adverse effects," Alter said.

For now, the screening focus in the U.S. is on baby boomers. Whether it could be a good idea in younger generations is not clear.

New hepatitis C infections in the U.S. are down sharply since the 1980s, according to a CDC study published last year.

In the mid-1980s, roughly 70 of every million Americans developed acute hepatitis C each year. Between 1994 and 2006, that rate was 90 percent lower: only seven per million per year.

As it stands, there are roughly 18,000 new hepatitis C infections each year -- most of which occur in injection-drug users.

SOURCE: and Annals of Internal Medicine, February 21, 2012.

(This story update clarifies that Victrelis and Incivek are U.S. brand names, in paragraph 21)

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Hepatitis C killing more Americans than HIV: studies

Flu shots ensure birth of healthy babies

Home > News > health-news

Washington, Feb 22 : Immunising pregnant women against flu virus seems to ensure the birth of healthy and normal weight babies, says a new study.

The study, a randomized controlled trial involving 340 healthy pregnant women in Bangladesh in the third trimester, looked at the effect of immunization on babies born to vaccinated mothers.

It was part of the Mother's gift project looking at the safety and efficacy of pneumococcal and influenza vaccines in pregnant Bangladesh women, the Canadian Medical Association Journal reports.

"We found that immunization against influenza during pregnancy had a substantial effect on mean birth weight and the proportion of infants who were small for gestational age," writes Mark Steinhoff, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Centre, with coauthors.

"Our data suggest that the prevention of infection with seasonal influenza in pregnant women by vaccination can influence fetal growth," state the authors, according to a Cincinnati statement.

The women were divided into two groups, one with 170 women who received flu shots and the second who received the pneumococcal vaccine as a control.

Researchers compared the weight of babies born in two periods, one in which there was circulation of an flu virus and one with limited circulation. Babies small for their gestational age are at higher risk of health and other issues over their lives.

During the period with circulating flu virus, the mean birth weight was 3178 grams in the flu vaccine group and seven percent higher than 2978 gram in the control group. The rate of premature births was lower in the influenza vaccine group as well. (IANS)

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Yearly Horoscope of 2012 for the Zodiac Sign:

 

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Flu shots ensure birth of healthy babies

Moms laud DOH's vaccination drive vs acute gastroenteritis among children

21-Feb-12, 10:10 PM | Philippine News Agency

CANDABA, Pampanga -- Several mothers with newborn babies here lauded the Department of Health (DOH) plan to include rota virus vaccination in its “Expanded Program for Immunization” (EPI) this year.

Buding Dela Pena, mother for a three-month-old baby girl, said the private clinics in this town are already offering rota virus vaccination.

However, Dela Pena said that many could not afford to pay for the vaccination because it is expensive.

"The daily expenses on buying milk is already a problem for us. More so the rota virus vaccine. That's why when we heard about the plan of government to offer it for free, we are indeed so happy,” she said.

Another mother of a two-month-old baby boy said that the current Aquino administration appeared to be serious in bringing the best health for the new born babies.

"We hope that the program would go on continuously for the health benefit of our babies," she said.

It was reported that the free rota virus vaccine will be available in local health centers late 2012.

The said oral rota virus vaccine is expected to benefit children coming from the poorest 5.2 million families.

The Philippines is the first country in Asia to include rota virus vaccine in its national immunization program. The inclusion of rota virus vaccine in national immunization program is also a step towards achieving the country's Millennium Development Goal.

Rota virus is the leading cause of severe acute gastroenteritis (vomiting and severe diarrhea) among children worldwide.

It is also the second leading killer of children aged five years or less in the Philippines and worldwide.

Study revealed that every minute, one child dies of diarrhea worldwide.

In the Philippines, at least 13 children under five years old died every day due to diarrhea. 

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Moms laud DOH's vaccination drive vs acute gastroenteritis among children