首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Cross-sectional HIV and HCV cascades of care across the regions of Ukraine between 2019 and 2020: findings from the CARE cohort
Authors:Olga Fursa  Joanne Reekie  Ihor Kuzin  Larysa Hetman  Alina Kryshchuk  Olena Starychenko  Nana Hrytsaiuk  Inna Khodus  Alla Nyzhnyk  Viktoriia Rakhuba  Maryna Kovalevska  Tetiana Maistat  Iryna Pryhoda  Marianna Ahieieva  Olena Varvarovska  Olena Valdenmaiier  Jens Lundgren  Lars Peters  the CARE study group
Affiliation:1. Centre of Excellence for Health, Immunity and Infections, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark;2. Public Health Center of the Ministry of Health of Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine;3. Kyiv City AIDS Prevention and Control Center (Kyiv City Clinical Hospital №5), Kyiv, Ukraine;4. Kyiv Regional Center for Public Health, Kyiv, Ukraine;5. Regional Clinical Center for AIDS Prevention and Control of Kharkiv Regional Council, Kharkiv, Ukraine;6. Mariupol City Hospital №4 named after I.K. Matsuka, Mariupol, Ukraine;7. Odesa City AIDS Prevention and Control Center, Odesa, Ukraine;8. Regional Medical Specialized Center of Zhytomyr Regional Council, Zhytomyr, Ukraine
Abstract:

Introduction

Eastern Europe is facing major HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) epidemics, with many people living with HIV (PLHIV) and HIV/HCV coinfection living in Ukraine. Despite the previous progress towards care quality improvement, the ongoing war in Ukraine is disrupting HIV and HCV care.

Methods

We described an HIV cascade of care (CoC) in PLHIV from two clinical sites and an HCV CoC for anti-HCV-positive PLHIV from six sites in Ukraine, enrolled in the CARE cohort between 1 January 2019 and 1 June 2020. The cross-sectional HIV CoC and HCV CoC are described at study enrolment.

Results

Of 1028 PLHIV, 1014 (98.6%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 97.7–99.3) were on antiretroviral therapy (ART), and 876 (86.4% of those on ART, 95% CI 84.1–88.4) were virologically suppressed. Of 894 participants on ART >6 months, 90.8% (95% CI 88.7–92.6) were virologically suppressed (HIV-RNA <200 copies/ml). Of 2040 anti-HCV-positive PLHIV, 417 (20.4%, 95% CI 18.7–22.3) were ever tested for HCV-RNA prior to enrolment, ranging from 4.9% to 54.4% across sites, and 13.5% were currently HCV-RNA positive. One hundred and eighteen persons (7.3% of ever chronically infected) had received HCV treatment, and 25 persons (1.6% of ever chronically infected) were cured, with variations across sites (0%–7.5%). The site diagnosing 54.4% of people with chronic HCV was the only one providing free RNA testing for all anti-HCV-positive persons, while the intra-country differences in treatment coverage were driven by the number of available direct-acting antiviral (DAA) courses.

Conclusions

Over 98% of PLHIV in care in both CARE sites in Ukraine were receiving ART, and the target of 90% virally suppressed was achieved in persons >6 months on ART. Only one of six HIV/HCV study sites tested over 50% anti-HCV-positive PLHIV for HCV-RNA and treated over 25% of eligible persons. While free HCV-RNA testing and DAA treatment are paramount to achieving HCV elimination targets, they remained a challenge in Ukraine in 2019–2020. The extent of the HIV and HCV care disruption during the war will be further assessed in the CARE cohort and compared with the pre-war findings.
Keywords:HIV  hepatitis C  HIV/HCV  cascade of care  Ukraine  Eastern Europe
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号