| 16 Janvier 2014
 The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that roughly 2 billion  individuals worldwide have been infected with HBV—a virus causing acute  or chronic liver disease that may lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer  (hepatocellular carcinoma, HCC).  WHO reports that 240 million are  living with chronic HBV, with 1.4 million of those individuals in the  U.S. according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and  Prevention (CDC).   Previous research shows that 60% of the population in China has been  infected with HBV and up to 10% are chronically infected, placing them  at risk for life-threatening liver disease. In fact, medical evidence  estimates that 500,000 Chinese die each year from HBV-related causes.  “China has the largest concentration of people infected with chronic  HBV and understanding the health and economic impact is extremely  important,” explains Dr. Mehlika Toy from the Asian Liver Center at  Stanford University School of Medicine who spearheaded the study while  she was a Takemi Fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health in  Boston, Massachusetts.  “Our study is the first to analyze cost and  cost-effectiveness of monitoring inactive CHB patients in Shanghai.”   Using simulation models, the research team compared the current  strategy of not monitoring inactive chronic HBV patients to a monitor  and treat (M&T) strategy.  The M&T strategy would include  twice-yearly assessment of HBV and alanine transaminase (ALT) levels in  patients with chronic HBV.   For active HBV cases the researchers  suggest treatment with entecavir, which evidence shows to be a  cost-effective antiviral therapy in China.   Results show that there were 1.5 million adult carriers of HBV in  Shanghai, with 63% of those hepatitis B virus e antigen (HBeAg)  positive.   The number of active cases of chronic HBV, were 258,139  HBeAg-positive group and 152,384 in the HBeAg-negative group.  Researchers estimated that the M&T strategy would cost $20,730  (U.S.) and result in 15.45 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) per  patient, compared to $20,455 and 15.35 QALYs for the current practice.   “Our findings suggest that monitoring of chronic HBV patients is  cost-effective, but relies on identifying more cases of HBV infection,  and increasing treatment, monitoring, and antiviral adherence to achieve  health gains,” concludes Dr. Toy.   “We estimate that with adherence to  monitoring and treatment, HCC could be reduced by 70% and mortality  caused by chronic HBV by 83%." 
A  novel study determined that monitoring inactive chronic hepatitis B  (HBV) carriers is a cost-effective strategy for China.  However, results  published in Hepatology,  a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases,  show that increasing treatment, monitoring and adherence to therapy are  necessary to achieve significant health benefits at the population  level. 









