4.5 Article

Estimating regional prevalence of chronic hepatitis C with a capture-recapture analysis

Journal

BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12879-021-06324-z

Keywords

Hepatitis C virus; REACH; micro-elimination; Capture-recapture

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The study estimated the number of ever-chronic HCV patients in the Utrecht region of the Netherlands to be 1245, indicating a prevalence of 0.10. This is 30% higher than the number of known HCV patients. The highest ever-chronic HCV prevalence was in the 1960-1969 age cohort (0.16). Using data from the REACH project, the current viremic HCV prevalence in the Utrecht region was estimated to be 0.05%, with 623 individuals identified as current viremic HCV patients.
Background The hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a candidate disease for micro-elimination. Accurate baseline HCV prevalence estimation is essential to monitor progress to micro-elimination but can be methodologically challenging in low-endemic regions like the Netherlands due to lack of disaggregated data by age or risk-groups on the number of chronic HCV patients (i.e. HCV RNA positive). This study estimates the number of patients that has had a chronic HCV infection (ever-chronic) in the Utrecht region of the Netherlands. Methods In the Utrecht province in the Netherlands, positive HCV tests from the period 2001-2015 from one diagnostic center and four hospital laboratories were collected. A two-source capture-recapture method was used to analyze the overlap between the two registries (with 92% HCV RNA and 8% HCV immunoblot confirmed infections) to obtain the number of ever-chronic HCV infections in the Utrecht region. The Utrecht region was defined as an area with a 25 km radius from the Utrecht city center. The current viremic HCV prevalence was calculated by taking into account the proportion of cured and deceased HCV patients from a local HCV retrieval (REACH) project. Results The estimated number of ever-chronic HCV patients was 1245 (95% CI 1164-1326) and would indicate a prevalence of 0.10 (95% CI 0.09-0.10) in the Utrecht region. This is 30% (95% CI 21-38%) more than the number of known HCV patients in the records. The ever-chronic HCV prevalence was highest in the 1960-1969 age cohort (0.16; 95% CI 0.14-0.18). Since 50% of the HCV patients were cured or deceased in the REACH-project, the number of current viremic HCV patients was estimated at 623 individuals in the Utrecht region (prevalence 0.05%). Conclusion The results of this study suggest a low ever-chronic and current HCV prevalence in the Utrecht area in the Netherlands, but other studies need to confirm this.

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