Episode Transcript
Ladies, should you be screened for hepatitis C just because you're a baby boomer? What is hepatitis C and who should be tested? This is Dr. Kirtly Jones from Obstetrics and Gynecology at University of Utah Health and this is The Scope.
Two things came across our breakfast table this week. One was a big two-page ad for hepatitis C medication in the New England Journal of Medicine, and I always read the New England Journal of Medicine at the breakfast table. The other was my husband across from me at the breakfast table, saying his doctor was asking why he hadn't had his test for hepatitis C. I didn't know that just because you're a boomer you should be tested for hepatitis C, and I'm a doctor. So these two things happening on the same day took me to the CDC, the Centers for Disease Control website to look at the recommendations for screening for hepatitis C.
First of all, what is hepatitis C? Well hepatitis C is the most common chronic blood-borne pathogen, and the word is chronic here, meaning it hangs around for all your life. In the United States, it's more common than chronic hepatitis B and more common than HIV. It is caused by a blood-borne virus, and most people don't know they have it. About 3.6 million people in the U.S. have hepatitis C, and it's the most common cause of chronic liver disease, not drinking. It is the most common cause of liver failure and the most common cause of needing a liver transplant. It's one of the most common causes of liver cancer. More people die of complications of hepatitis C than HIV.
So why is this a women's issue? Well, it isn't exactly. But it's a women's health issue. So how do you get this virus? Well, it's blood-borne and body fluid borne, so you get it from blood transfusions before we started testing in the early '90s, you get it from using IV drugs, you get it, not very easily, from having sex with someone who has it, and you get it not very easily if you're a baby of a mom who has it.
Who should be tested? Well, anybody who has ever injected drugs, who has had blood products or an organ transplant before 1992. If someone in the healthcare field has been exposed to blood from someone who had hepatitis C with a needle stick. A baby of a mom who has hepatitis C should be tested, but transmission rate in pregnancy is pretty low, about one in 20, much lower than HIV is transmitted from moms to babies. Someone with persistently abnormal liver function should be tested.
Now comes the boomer part. About 1.6% of Americans are positive for hepatitis C. However, 4.3% of boomers are positive for hepatitis C, and that's about 1 in 25, so that's pretty common. You and your closest 25 friends and relatives, there's probably a couple of them positive. In the estimated 3.2 million people chronically infected with hepatitis C in the U.S., approximately 75%, three-quarters, were born between 1945 and 1965 or are baby boomers. People born during these years are five times more likely to be infected than other non-boomer adults.
So this gets right to ladies of a certain age and, of course, guys of a certain age. The CDC recommends a one-time screening for boomers regardless of what you might think are your risk factors. I guess they think we must have forgotten our past of sex, drugs, and rock and roll, and it was so long ago and we don't feel bad, but we must have dodged a bullet.
Well, the reason the CDC recommends a one-time screening is that hepatitis C is a very slow virus to cause problems, and it may take more than 20 years to have enough liver damage to really get sick. For many people who were infected, the virus is chronic and causes ongoing, low-grade liver damage. If someone is positive for hepatitis C and they have normal liver functions or mild abnormalities, they can just be followed for changes through their life.
Finally, and importantly, hepatitis C can be managed. Over 50% of people can have progress of their liver disease slowed with medications, and hepatitis C can be cured. So it's important to find out if you have it before too much damage is done to your liver.
So how do you get tested? It's a simple blood test looking for antibodies to hepatitis C. Having antibodies means you were exposed to hepatitis C sometime in your life. If that is positive, another test looks for active hepatitis C virus in your blood. So ladies and gentlemen of a certain age, all you boomers out there born between 1945 and 1965, now you know more and understand why your doctor might be recommending a test for hepatitis C. And now I know more and thanks for joining us on The Scope.
updated: May 17, 2019
originally published: July 27, 2017