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Epidemiological trends of HIV/HCV coinfection in Spain, 2015-2019.

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Date

2022-01-17

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Fanciulli, Chiara
Berenguer, Juan
Busca, Carmen
Vivancos, María J
Téllez, María J
Domínguez, Lourdes
Domingo, Pere
Navarro, Jordi
Santos, Jesús
Iribarren, José A

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Abstract

We assessed the prevalence of anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies and active HCV infection (HCV-RNA-positive) in people living with HIV (PLWH) in Spain in 2019 and compared the results with those of four similar studies performed during 2015-2018. The study was performed in 41 centres. Sample size was estimated for an accuracy of 1%. Patients were selected by random sampling with proportional allocation. The reference population comprised 41 973 PLWH, and the sample size was 1325. HCV serostatus was known in 1316 PLWH (99.3%), of whom 376 (28.6%) were HCV antibody (Ab)-positive (78.7% were prior injection drug users); 29 were HCV-RNA-positive (2.2%). Of the 29 HCV-RNA-positive PLWH, infection was chronic in 24, it was acute/recent in one, and it was of unknown duration in four. Cirrhosis was present in 71 (5.4%) PLWH overall, three (10.3%) HCV-RNA-positive patients and 68 (23.4%) of those who cleared HCV after anti-HCV therapy (p = 0.04). The prevalence of anti-HCV antibodies decreased steadily from 37.7% in 2015 to 28.6% in 2019 (p  In Spain, the prevalence of active HCV infection among PLWH at the end of 2019 was 2.2%, i.e. 90.0% lower than in 2015. Increased exposure to DAAs was probably the main reason for this sharp reduction. Despite the high coverage of treatment with direct-acting antiviral agents, HCV-related cirrhosis remains significant in this population.

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Antiviral Agents
Coinfection
HIV Infections
Hepacivirus
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis C, Chronic
Humans
Liver Cirrhosis
RNA
Spain

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HIV infection/*epidemiology, coinfection/*epidemiology, hepatitis C/drug therapy/*epidemiology

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