An estimated 2.7-3.9 million people in the United States have chronic hepatitis C. HCV infection becomes chronic in approximately 75%–85% of cases. The overall incidence rate for 2014 was 0.7 cases per 100,000 population, an increase from 2010–2012
2. Some facts
An estimated 2.7-3.9 million people in the United States have chronic hepatitis C.
An estimated 30,500 acute hepatitis C cases occurred in 2014.
HCV infection becomes chronic in approximately 75%–85% of cases.
In 2014, a total of 2,194 cases of acute hepatitis C were reported to CDC from 40
states.
The overall incidence rate for 2014 was 0.7 cases per 100,000 population, an
increase from 2010–2012
*Source: CDC.GOV
3. Who is at risk?
Current or former injection drug users, including those who injected only once many years ago
Recipients of clotting factor concentrates made before 1987, when more advanced methods for
manufacturing those products were developed
Recipients of blood transfusions or solid organ transplants before July 1992, when better testing
of blood donors became available
Chronic hemodialysis patients
Persons with known exposures to HCV, such as
health care workers after needlesticks involving HCV-positive blood
recipients of blood or organs from a donor who tested HCV-positive
Persons with HIV infection
Children born to HCV-positive mothers
4. Some more facts:
Of every 100 persons infected with HCV, approximately
75–85 will go on to develop chronic infection
60–70 will go on to develop chronic liver disease
5–20 will go on to develop cirrhosis over a period of 20–30 years
1–5 will die from the consequences of chronic infection (liver cancer or cirrhosis)
Most patients are unaware of the disease.
5. How is it transmitted?
Injection drug use (currently the most common means of HCV transmission in the
United States)
Receipt of donated blood, blood products, and organs (once a common means of
transmission but now rare in the United States since blood screening became
available in 1992)
Needle stick injuries in health care settings
Birth to an HCV-infected mother
ex with an HCV-infected person (Less frequent)
Sharing personal items contaminated with infectious blood, such as razors or
toothbrushes-Very unusual
(Other health care procedures that involve invasive procedures, such as
injections
6. Who should be screened?
Currently injecting drugs
Ever injected drugs, including those who injected once or a few times many years ago
Have certain medical conditions, including persons:
who received clotting factor concentrates produced before 1987
who were ever on long-term hemodialysis
with persistently abnormal alanine aminotransferase levels (ALT)
who have HIV infection
Were prior recipients of transfusions or organ transplants, including persons who:
were notified that they received blood from a donor who later tested positive for HCV infection
received a transfusion of blood, blood components, or an organ transplant before July 1992
HCV- testing based on a recognized exposure is recommended for:
Healthcare, emergency medical, and public safety workers after needle sticks, sharps, or mucosal exposures to
HCV-positive blood
Children born to HCV-positive women
7. Baby Boomers and Hepatitis C screening
Almost exactly nine months after World War II ended, “the cry of the baby
was heard across the land,” as historian Landon Jones later described the
trend. More babies were born in 1946 than ever before: 3.4 million, 20
percent more than in 1945. This was the beginning of the so-called “baby
boom.” In 1947, another 3.8 million babies were born; 3.9 million were born
in 1952; and more than 4 million were born every year from 1954 until 1964,
when the boom finally tapered off. By then, there were 76.4 million “baby
boomers” in the United States. They made up almost 40 percent of the
nation’s population.
Those born between 1945 and 1965 should be screened once.
8. Testing:
Anti–HCV antibody testing followed by polymerase chain reaction testing for
viremia is accurate for identifying patients with chronic HCV infection.
Various noninvasive tests with good diagnostic accuracy are possible
alternatives to liver biopsy for diagnosing fibrosis or cirrhosis.
Early detection has shown to be effective in altering the natural course of the
disease.
Screening should be done voluntarily and with the patient clearly
understanding that they are being screened.
9. Symptoms:
Most people have no symptoms. Those who do develop symptoms may have
fatigue, nausea, loss of appetite, and yellowing of the eyes and skin.
but people may experience: Pain areas: in the abdomen Gastrointestinal:
bleeding, bloating, fluid in the abdomen, or nausea
Whole body: fatigue, fever, or loss of appetite Skin: web of swollen blood
vessels in the skin or yellow skin and eyes
Also common: depression or weight loss
10. Medications:
Antiviral drug: Reduces viruses' ability to replicate.
Interferon alfa-2b (Pegintron)
Pegylated interferon alfa
Sofosbuvir (Sovaldi)
Ribavirin (Rebetol, Copegus, Virazole, and Ribasphere)
Simeprevir (Olysio)
Ledipasvir
*Always remember: Prevention is better than cure! Say goodbye to
those shared needles! Get yourself checked!