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Ethical assessment of hepatitis C virus treatment: The lesson from first generation protease inhibitors

Authors :
Antonio Gasbarrini
CALOGERO CAMMA'
Pietro Refolo
Pierluigi NAVARRA
Lucia Craxì
Antonio G. Spagnolo
Americo Cicchetti
Marco Marchetti
Dario Sacchini
Sacchini, Dario
Craxì, Lucia
Refolo, Pietro
Minacori, Roberta
Cicchetti, Americo
Gasbarrini, Antonio
Cammà, Calogero
Spagnolo, Antonio G.
Spagnolo, ANTONIO GIOACCHINO
Morisco, Filomena
Sacchini, D
Craxì, L
Refolo, P
Minacori, R
Cicchetti, A
Gasbarrini, A
Cammà, C
Spagnolo, A
WEF Study, G
Fagiuoli, S
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
ELSEVIER, 2014.

Abstract

Since chronic hepatitis C has mostly become curable, issues concerning choice and allocation of treatment are of major concern. We assessed the foremost ethical issues in hepatitis C virus therapy with 1st generation protease inhibitors using the personalist ethical framework within the health technology assessment methodology. Our aim was to identify values at stake/in conflict and to support both the physicians’ choices in hepatitis C therapy and social (macro-) allocation decision-making. The ethical assessment indicates that: (1) safety/effectiveness profile of treatment is guaranteed if its use is restricted to the patients subgroups who may benefit from it; (2) patients should be carefully informed, particularly on treatment deferral, and widespread information on these therapies should be implemented; (3) since treatment was proven to be cost-effective, its use is acceptable respecting resource macro-allocation. Concerning individual (micro-) location criteria: (a) criteria for eligibility to treatment should be clearly identified and updated periodically; (b) information on criteria for eligibility/deferral to treatment for specific patients’ subgroups should be made widely known. Interferon-based regimens will disappear from use within the next year, with the introduction of highly effective/tolerable combination regimens of direct-acting antivirals, thus profoundly changing social choices. Nonetheless, our model could support future ethical assessment since the evaluation pertaining ethical domains remains generally applicable.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f95af6e008e4d2418b994b075b38e1c1