Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Task force urges expanded screening for hepatitis C

- LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — Most American adults need to be checked for hepatitis C under new guidelines released this week that urge millions more people to get screened for the liver-damaging virus that can fester for decades before it’s spotted.

The call for expanded screening for Americans ages 18 to 79 is the first since 2013 when U.S. health authoritie­s urged all baby boomers to get a one-time hepatitis C test because that age group appeared at particular­ly high risk.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said Monday that hepatitis C is on the rise because of the opioid crisis, prompting the recommenda­tion to expand testing.

Finding infection early is critical now that drugs are available that cure most people after two to three months of treatment. And the price of those medication­s has dropped sharply in recent years.

Authoritie­s estimate that only about half of people with hepatitis C know they’re infected. The task force concluded that more widespread screening would be cost-saving, giving its recommenda­tion a rating that requires insurance companies to cover testing without patient co-pays.

About 2.4 million people in the U.S. are living with hepatitis C, and there were an estimated 44,700 new infections in 2017 alone, the task force reported in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

That’s largely due to the opioid epidemic: The most rapid increase in infections over the past decade has been in young adults, 20- to 39-yearolds who inject drugs, the task force found. Sharing needles is the main way that hepatitis C spreads in the U.S.

“It is time to revisit the effective but now outdated baby boomer screening recommenda­tions, and the updated recommenda­tions … are welcome,” Drs. Camilla Graham of Harvard Medical School and Stacey Trooskin of the University of Pennsylvan­ia wrote in an accompanyi­ng editorial.

They weren’t involved in the guidelines, but cautioned that greater access to hepatitis C treatment and addiction treatment are needed.

While there’s limited informatio­n on hepatitis C infections in teens, the task force said doctors may consider screening those known to be at risk because of past or current drug use.

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