Hepatitis C has never been a death sentence. Recent breakthroughs in treatment mean that hepatitis C doesn’t even have to be a life sentence.

In the past 20 years, Dr. Paul Kwo of the Indiana University School of Medicine said he can think of only two medical breakthroughs that have effectively cured human diseases. The first is the use of antibiotics to fight Helicobacter pylori bacteria, which cause ulcers and can lead to stomach cancer.

The second is an all-oral drug regimen to cure hepatitis C, a virus that causes the liver to scar, and can eventually lead to cirrhosis and cancer.

“The newer medications have changed pretty much the landscape of hepatitis C treatment,” said Dr. Amar Pinto, a specialist in gastroenterology and hepatology with Premier Healthcare. “The success rates are very high.

“Literally, these are like miracle drugs, so to speak. I believe with the medication we have currently, the need for liver transplantation will go down.”

Hepatitis C infections in Monroe County increased 83 percent in the past five years, according to state health department data. On a state and local level, health departments are working to combat rising levels of hepatitis C caused by injection drug use by implementing syringe exchange programs, where drug users can legally turn used needles in to the health department in exchange for clean ones.

As the image of a typical injection drug user has shifted, so have the demographics of people infected with hepatitis C. Active drug users live in rural and suburban areas, not just in urban cities. Users are white, young, and for those addicted to opioids such as heroin, often first start abusing prescription painkillers.

The risk in moving from pills to injection drugs is the prevalence of blood-borne diseases. Those at highest risk to contract and spread hepatitis C are injection drug users, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than half of all injection drug users with HIV also have hepatitis C.

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