Member Info
-
Profile Type: Regular Member
-
Profile Views: 1,093 views
-
Friends: 0 friends
-
Last Update: February 15, 2021
-
Joined: February 15, 2021
Info
Personal Information
-
First Name
Bog
-
Last Name
Likov
-
Gender
Male
-
Birthday
April 4, 1989
Personal Details
-
About Me
Hepatitis C is a viral infection that attacks the liver. Infection with hepatitis C can lead to serious liver disease, including cirrhosis and cancer. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is transmitted by exposure to blood or other bodily fluids that contain HCV. Approximately 3.5 millionTrusted Source Americans have chronic hepatitis C. About 19,000 of these people die each year from cirrhosis or liver cancer. Fortunately, recent advancements in the fight against this virus have changed the outlook for people with HCV. New drugs have transformed the disease from one that can, at best, be controlled to one that can be cured for most people who have it. However, a downside to these successful drug development efforts is their hefty cost of treatment. Read on to learn how much these treatments can cost, what makes them so expensive, and how your treatment for HCV can be more affordable. The newer drugs available today cure up to 99 percentTrusted Source of people who take them, depending on the type of HCV infection and treatment exposure. These new drugs are called direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first of these medications for HCV treatment in 2011. Several more medications have been approved since that time. Most of these individual drugs are effective for specific strains, or genotypes, of HCV. However, some newer combination medications, which contain two or more drugs, work for all genotypes. Most of these drugs take at least 12 weeks to cure HCV, while the most recently approved drug,
Share