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Hepatitis C surpasses HIV as killer, baby boomers most at risk

FAIRWAY, KS (KCTV) -

Hepatitis C deaths are on the rise, according to reports, and people might be surprised to hear who is contracting the disease.

At one point, it was recommended that only those with previous high-risk behavior, such as those who experimented with drugs and needles, be tested for hepatitis C. But now, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said they are seeing a certain age group is at risk.

The CDC recommends that those born between the years 1946 to 1964 be screened for hepatitis C. Their reasoning is because the CDC said they have seen an increase in the liver-attacking disease in Baby Boomers, largely because injection drug use was frequent in this age group, and even one-time exposure to injection drug use carries a high risk.

"Those Baby Boomers are now aging and since hep C is a disease that has a latency period of 20 to 40 years, it takes that long to develop symptoms," said Dr. Fredric Regenstein with Saint Luke's Health System.

Regenstein, a liver transplant doctor at St. Luke's Health System, said the disease has struck more patients than the well-known AIDS virus.

"It's a very, very common disease. It's the No. 1 reason why we see so many liver transplants," he said.

Hepatitis is a viral infection that can cause swelling and inflammation of the liver and can lead to damage of the organ, cancer and death.

But the good news is, it is curable.

The treatment can be costly with amounts up to $48,000 for a six- to 12-month supply of drugs and it's a very challenging treatment. But Regenstein said medication is improving and testing is critical.

"This virus can be cured. Once it's suppressed, it has nowhere to go," he said.

A vaccine for hepatitis B has been recommended for all infants since the early 1990s, eliminating its prevalence among younger generations. Hepatitis C wasn't discovered until 1989 and has no vaccine.

Two-thirds of people with hepatitis C are unaware that they have the virus, because it takes a few decades to show itself.

Because of this shocking realization, federal health officials are considering whether Baby Boomers should get a one-time blood test to check if their livers harbor this ticking time bomb.

The CDC also recommends even those who may have gotten tattoos or blood transfusions years ago should be tested for hepatitis C.

Copyright 2012 KCTV (Meredith Corp.)  All rights reserved.

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Hepatitis C surpasses HIV as killer, baby boomers most at risk

Hepatitis C Surpasses AIDS As Killer, Hitting Baby-Boom Generations Hardest

(An electron micrograph of the hepatitis C virus.)

By Lynne Adkins

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A new study indicates that one in every 33 baby boomers has the Hepatitis C virus, and many don’t even know they have this liver destroying disease.

Federal health officials say Hepatitis C is now killing more people than the AIDS virus, and most are over 45 years of age.

Dr. Robert Bettiker, associate professor of medicine in infectious diseases at Temple University School of Medicine, says that once symptoms appear, the liver is already damaged.

He says the major symptoms include “pain in the right upper quadrant (of your abdomen) that goes on for days or months. Your eyes might turn yellow, you might start bleeding a lot if you get a cut, and the veins in your esophagus can get really big and can rupture.”

Dr. Bettiker says if you had a blood transfusion before 1990 (when routine screening for hepatitis C in donated blood began) or have ever used intravenous drugs, you should tell your doctor. A blood test can determine if you’ve been exposed to the deadly virus, and early treatment could be effective.

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Hepatitis C Surpasses AIDS As Killer, Hitting Baby-Boom Generations Hardest

Hepatitis C killing more Americans than HIV

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Hepatitis C has surpassed HIV as a killer of U.S. adults, and screening all "baby boomers" could be one way to stem the problem, according to two new government studies.

Hepatitis C is a liver infection caused by a virus of the same name that is usually passed through contact with infected blood. An estimated 75 to 85 percent of infections become chronic, which can eventually cause serious diseases like cirrhosis (scarring of the liver) and liver cancer.

In one of the new studies, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that by 2007, hepatitis C was killing more Americans than HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS.

In 2007, hepatitis C killed 15,100 Americans, accounting for 0.6 percent of all deaths that year. That compared with a little over 12,700 deaths related to HIV.

Those numbers are based on death certificates, and almost certainly underestimate the real scope, according to the CDC. Compared with HIV, hepatitis C infection is more likely to still be unrecognized at the time of a person's death.

"Hepatitis C mortality has, regrettably, been on the rise for a number of years," said Dr. John Ward, director of the CDC's viral hepatitis division and an author of the new study.

But, he told Reuters Health, "many of those deaths could be prevented."

Of the estimated 3.2 million Americans with chronic hepatitis infection, about half of them don't know it, according to the CDC.

That's because the initial infection causes no symptoms in most cases. Instead, the virus silently damages the liver over the years, and people may only discover they are infected when they develop irreversible liver cirrhosis.

Chronic hepatitis C is most common in "baby boomers" -- about two thirds of U.S. infections are in people born between 1945 and 1964, Ward's team notes in their report, which is published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

That predominance among boomers has a lot to do with casual injection-drug use back in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, since sharing tainted needles is a major route for passing on the virus.

Some people also contracted hepatitis C through blood transfusions during that era. Since 1992, all blood donations in the U.S. have been tested for hepatitis C.

Baby boomers with hepatitis C are now getting to an age where the consequences of the infection would be evident, said Dr. Harvey Alter, a researcher with the National Institutes of Health who wrote an editorial on the new studies.

"The big issue is that most people with chronic infection are still not identified," Alter told Reuters Health.

Right now, health officials recommend that certain people at increased risk have blood tests to be screened for hepatitis C. That includes anyone who's used injection drugs, people who received blood transfusions or organ transplants before 1992 and people with HIV.

"But that approach hasn't been very effective," Alter said.

Another option, Ward said, would be to screen all baby boomers.

Experts are only seriously considering that option now because of recent advances in hepatitis C treatment.

Before 1990, the infection was virtually incurable. Then researchers found that a combination of two medicines, interferon and ribavirin, could boost the cure rate to 45 percent ("cure" meaning the virus is cleared from the body).

The downside is that the regimen is hard to take. Interferon has to be injected, and the whole treatment course takes about a year. The drugs can also have side effects ranging from flu-like symptoms to sleep problems to depression.

Less than a year ago, the U.S. approved two new oral drugs that, when added to the old regimen, send the cure rate to 70 percent. Adding either one of the drugs -- boceprevir (Victrelis) or telaprevir (Incivek) -- can also cut the treatment time to about six months in some people.

The side effects are still there with the triple-drug approach. But with the high possibility of a cure, more people with chronic hepatitis C may want treatment, both Ward and Alter said.

So in a second study, the CDC researchers estimated the cost-effectiveness of doing one-time hepatitis C screening in all Americans born between 1945 and 1965.

They calculated that compared with the "status quo," screening baby boomers would catch an extra 808,580 cases of hepatitis C, at a cost of almost $2,900 for each one.

Ultimately, screening would prevent an extra 82,000 deaths, the CDC estimates -- assuming a certain percentage of people agree to treatment with interferon and ribavirin.

As far as cost-effectiveness, Ward said, that would put baby-boomer screening in line with other widely accepted types of screening, like tests for colon cancer and high blood pressure.

If screened people received one of the new hepatitis C drugs, that would save even more lives -- an additional 121,000 over current screening policy, the CDC says. But the cost would be greater, since both new drugs are very expensive.

Incivek costs nearly $50,000 for the whole course, while Victrelis rings up at roughly $26,000 to $48,000 depending on the duration of treatment.

Still, Alter, who supports baby boomer screening, said the approach looks to be "very cost-effective" -- especially when compared to the costs of treating cirrhosis and liver cancer, which are the most common reasons for liver transplants.

"The beauty of this is, it's six months to one year of treatment," Alter said.

Both Alter and Ward also pointed to other medications now in the drug industry's pipeline that are aimed at taking interferon injections out of the equation.

"Hopefully, we'll soon have oral therapies that are easier to take and have fewer adverse effects," Alter said.

For now, the screening focus in the U.S. is on baby boomers. Whether it could be a good idea in younger generations is not clear.

New hepatitis C infections in the U.S. are down sharply since the 1980s, according to a CDC study published last year.

In the mid-1980s, roughly 70 of every million Americans developed acute hepatitis C each year. Between 1994 and 2006, that rate was 90 percent lower: only seven per million per year.

As it stands, there are roughly 18,000 new hepatitis C infections each year -- most of which occur in injection-drug users.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/xOLGYg and http://bit.ly/xzj1ve Annals of Internal Medicine, February 21, 2012.

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Hepatitis C killing more Americans than HIV

WordPress Basics for Beginners – The WordPress Page Menu (WordPress 3.3.1) – Video

21-02-2012 13:31 For more videos, click on this link - thstuts.com WordPress Basics for Beginners You can organize and edit your WordPress pages via the Page tab in the WordPress Dashboard Menu. This video will take you through the pages area of the dashboard menu. (WordPress Version 3.3.1)

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SMARTRAC Joins the OSPT Alliance as Full Member

SMARTRAC Joins the OSPT Alliance as Full Member

RFID Technology Leader Will Work to Advance Open, Vendor-Neutral
Fare Collection Systems

MUNICH, Germany and Amsterdam, Netherlands, February 21, 2012 - The Open
Standard for Public Transport (OSPT(TM)) Alliance today announced that
SMARTRAC, a leading developer, manufacturer, and supplier of RFID
transponders, has joined the OSPT Alliance.  As a full member of the
Alliance, SMARTRAC will participate in the Alliance´s activities around the
development of next-generation transit fare collection systems based on the
CIPURSE(TM) open security standard.

´We recognize the OSPT´s mission and the work of its members to establish
CIPURSE as the first, open global standard for next-generation transit fare
collection, ´ said Wolfgang Schneider, Member of the Management Board at
SMARTRAC.  ´CIPURSE represents a critical opportunity for the transport
ecosystem to move to next-generation fare collection systems, and we look
forward to working with industry partners in OSPT to achieve these goals.´

The CIPURSE open security standard addresses the need by transit
authorities for future-proof fare collection systems with more advanced
security than currently in use.  Because it is an open standard, CIPURSE
promotes vendor neutrality, cross-vendor system interoperability, lower
technology adoption risks, higher quality and improved market
responsiveness, all of which result in lower operating costs and greater
flexibility for transport system operators. CIPURSE also offers a global
basis for a faster transition of transit fare systems to the use of
emerging NFC mobile phones and other devices, and support for the adoption
of NFC transit applications for a truly future-proof solution.

´We are pleased to welcome SMARTRAC as the newest member of the OSPT
Alliance, ´ said Laurent Cremer, executive director. ´SMARTRAC is a key
supplier in the value chain in the transport industry and will be an
invaluable resource to our members as we work to establish the benefits of
an open approach in public transport systems throughout the world.´

About SMARTRAC:
SMARTRAC is a leading developer, manufacturer, and supplier of RFID
components for a broad range of applications in all current frequency
standards. The company produces both ready-made and customized transponders
for public transport, access control, RFID-based car immobilizers, animal
identification, libraries, industry, and logistics.

SMARTRAC is one of the global market leaders in high-quality RFID inlays
for electronic passports (e-passports) and contactless credit cards
(e-payment) as well as for RFID transponders for public transportation
applications. SMARTRAC was founded in 2000, went public in July 2006, and
trades as a stock corporation under Dutch law with its registered
headquarters in Amsterdam. The company currently employs approximately
3,300 employees and maintains a global research and development,
production, and sales network.

If you have any questions, please contact:
Tanja Moehler
Head of Corporate Communications & Marketing
SMARTRAC N.V.
Phone: +31 20 30 50 157
Email: tanja.moehler@smartrac-group.com
Internet: http://www.smartrac-group.com

About the OSPT Alliance:
The OSPT Alliance is an international association chartered to define a new
open standard for secure transit fare collection solutions. It provides
industry education, creates workgroup opportunities and catalyzes the
development and adoption of innovative fare collection technologies,
applications and services. The OSPT Alliance was founded by leading
technology companies and membership is open to technology providers,
transit operators, consultants, solution vendors, government agencies and
other stakeholders in the transit ecosystem. For additional information,
please visit http://www.osptalliance.org.

For additional information:
Patrick Corman
OSPT Alliance
+1-650-326-9648
patrick.corman@osptalliance.org

Forward-looking statements:
To the extent that this press release contains forward-looking statements,
such statements are based on assumptions, planning, and forecasts at the
time of publication of this press release. Forward-looking statements
always involve uncertainties. Business and economic risks and developments,
the conduct of competitors, political decisions, and other factors may
cause the actual results to be materially different from the assumptions,
planning, and forecasts at the time of publication of this press release.
Therefore, SMARTRAC N.V. does not assume any responsibility relating to
forward-looking statements contained in this press release. Furthermore,
SMARTRAC N.V. does not assume any obligation to update the forward-looking
statements contained in this press release.

End of Media Release

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SMARTRAC Joins the OSPT Alliance as Full Member