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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Egypt, once a Hepatitis C sufferer, draws cure seekers

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Like millions in Egypt, Ahmed Nada suffered silently from Hepatitis C. But the country is turning from the world’s most afflicted by the disease to a global destination for those seeking a cure.


Nada, 31, only learned he carried the virus when he tried to donate blood.


Previously, a Hepatitis C infection, even when diagnosed, would have gone untreated or simply been managed.


But a cheap new drug produced in Egypt since 2015 and a government programme to eliminate the condition meant Nada could be easily cured. He registered on a government website and was directed to the nearest treatment centre.


Nada says the entire process was simple “from the moment I filled in the application”.


Egypt has the highest prevalence of Hepatitis C infection in the world, an epidemic that started with a government programme for mass vaccinations with unsterilised syringes in the 1950s.


“Just about every family in Egypt is touched by Hepatitis C,” World Health Organization official Dr Henk Bekedam wrote in a 2014 report on the disease, which the agency said was killing about 40,000 Egyptians a year.


Since 2006, Egypt has carried out surveys to determine the epidemic’s spread and negotiated cheaper drugs from abroad.


However, its first breakthrough came when the US-based Gilead Sciences pharmaceutical company developed Sovaldi, a cure approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2013.


Egypt negotiated a deal to reduce the price of a course of treatment from $84,000, or $1,000 a pill, to a fraction of that.


The National Committee for Control of Viral Hepatitis set up a website so sufferers could access the drug. “The first day we had 100,000 patients, the second day 100,000 patients registered, and the following week 50,000 patients daily,” said Manal Hamdy el Sayed, a founding member of the committee running the programme.


The next breakthrough came in 2015 when Egypt began to manufacture the drug locally, reducing the price for the full course to just $83, the committee’s executive director Kadry al Saeed said.


Waiting lists for the cure ended in July 2016.


Now an Egyptian company has capitalised on the low cost of the cure locally to attract patients from abroad, where the drug is seen as exorbitantly priced.


Tour N’ Cure treats visiting patients for about eight per cent of the treatment’s cost abroad.


“We treat patients in almost all countries,” said Mostafa el Sayed, the campaign’s managing director. — AFP


Maram Mazen


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