Times Colonist

Boomers urged to get hep-C exam

Researcher­s recommend people be tested based on their age — not just possible risk factors

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO

Canadians born between 1945 and 1975 — essentiall­y the baby-boom generation — should be tested for the potentiall­y liver-destroying virus hepatitis C, a new set of guidelines recommends.

More than 250,000 Canadians are believed to be infected with hepatitis C, but 40 to 70 per cent are unaware they harbour the blood-borne virus because it can take decades before symptoms become evident. Chronic infection can lead to cirrhosis of the liver or liver cancer.

The Canadian Associatio­n for the Study of the Liver, a national group of health-care providers and researcher­s, published its guidelines on testing and treating hepatitis C in Monday’s edition of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal.

A key recommenda­tion is that people be tested based on their age — not only possible risk factors, said Dr. Jordan Feld, a liver specialist at Toronto’s University Health Network and a co-author of the guidelines.

“And the reason we’ve done this is it just happens that somewhere between two-thirds and three-quarters of people with hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1975 in Canada,” he said.

“So just the way someone gets a blood pressure check or a cholestero­l check or a colonoscop­y based on their age, we would recommend that they get a hepatitis C test if they’re born between those years.

“And if we do that, we hopefully diagnose the vast majority of people living with hepatitis C.”

The recommenda­tions differ from those issued last year by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care, which advised screening only people at high risk of infection, no matter their age.

“If we could identify people who were not at elevated risk of hepatitis C, I would be all for saying we shouldn’t screen those people,” said Feld. “The problem is we aren’t very good at identifyin­g [them].

“That means we have to ask people about risk factors … and most people don’t know whether they’ve been exposed.”

People at high risk include those who: engaged in IV drug use with shared needles; had a tattoo or body piercing with unsterile equipment; had unprotecte­d sex with multiple partners; or received a blood transfusio­n, blood product or an organ transplant prior to 1992.

One of the arguments the task force made against age-based screening was the lack of access to effective treatment.

But since those guidelines were issued, hepatitis treatment has improved dramatical­ly with the advent of antiviral medication­s, Feld said.

“The old treatments were difficult to take, had lots of sideeffect­s and a low cure rate. Our current treatments are as simple as a pill or a few pills a day for as little as eight to 12 weeks, with cure rates above 95 per cent,” he said.

While the drugs are relatively expensive, they are cost-effective in terms of the health-care resources needed to treat advanced liver disease and other complicati­ons of chronic hepatitis C infection, said Feld, adding that almost all private and most provincial and territoria­l drug plans now cover their cost.

Screening for the hepatitis C virus, or HCV, involves an inexpensiv­e blood test. Most people exposed to the virus are able to clear the infection, so more than 98 per cent of those tests will be negative, based on prevalence studies of the disease.

But for those found to be chronicall­y infected, the test can mean timely life-saving treatment.

“Our nightmare is when we see someone who is coming to see us for the first time because they have symptoms,” he said. “They only develop symptoms when they already have cirrhosis and very advanced liver disease in general.

“But we really don’t want to wait until that point because the treatments don’t work quite as well in these sick folks. “We cure the infection, but we don’t reverse all of the liver damage.”

In a related commentary, Drs. Jawad Ahmad and James Crismale of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, lauded the new recommenda­tions.

“The updated Canadian Associatio­n for the Study of the Liver guideline takes an important step in continuing the fight against HCV in Canada, expanding screening indication­s to the baby boomer cohort and recommendi­ng curative therapy to all individual­s affected by HCV.”

Feld said the World Health Organizati­on wants to eliminate hepatitis C cases globally by 2030, a goal that Canada has endorsed.

“But we’re not going to get there unless we screen and treat those who are infected.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Jordan Feld of the Toronto Western Hospital is a co-author of new guidelines that recommend hepatitis C testing for people born between 1947 and 1975.
Dr. Jordan Feld of the Toronto Western Hospital is a co-author of new guidelines that recommend hepatitis C testing for people born between 1947 and 1975.

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