Highlights
- •Most national HCV policies lack specific recommendations for HCV testing and treatment in children and adolescents.
- •Only 33 countries have specific recommendations for treatment of children and/or adolescents.
- •Updated guidance on testing and treatment is needed for younger age groups.
- •Efforts are particularly needed in countries with a high HCV burden in children.
Summary
Background & Aims
Methods
Results
Conclusions
Lay summary
Graphical abstract

Keywords
Abbreviations:
AASLD (American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases), APASL (Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver), CPGs (clinical practice guidelines), DAAs (direct-acting antivirals), EASL (European Association for the Study of the Liver), ESPGHAN (European Society for Paediatric Gastroenterology Hepatology and Nutrition), GLE (glecaprevir), GHSS (Global Health Sector Strategy), GT (genotype), IDU (injecting drug use), IFN (interferon), LED (ledipasvir), LMICs (low- and middle-income countries), MoH (ministries of health), NASPGHAN (North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology Hepatology and Nutrition), NSPs (national strategic plans), PIB (pibrentasvir), RBV (ribavirin), SOF (sofosbuvir), VEL (velpatasvir), WHO (World Health Organization)Introduction
Global hepatitis report.
Progress report on HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections.
Global hepatitis report.
Progress report on HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections.
Global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis 2016-2021.
Regional action plan for viral hepatitis in South-East Asia: 2016-2021.
Plan of Action for the prevention and control of Viral Hepatitis.
Regional action plan for the implementation of the global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis 2017-2021.
Guidelines for the Screening Care and Treatment of Persons with Chronic Hepatitis C Infection.
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Hepatitis C in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Civil Society Response to the Epidemic.
Viral Hepatitis: Global Policy.
Global policy report on the prevention and control of viral hepatitis - in WHO member states.
Hepatitis C in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Civil Society Response to the Epidemic.
Progress report on HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections.
Materials and methods
Search strategy, data sources, and data collection
WHO and major hepatology international and regional professional society guidance on HCV testing and treatment of chronic HCV in adolescents and children
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Guidelines for the care and treatment of persons diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
NSPs and CPGs from WHO Member States
- •Is there a policy on screening for HCV infection in pregnancy and, if so, is this routinely offered to all or targeted to specific high-risk groups?
- •Is there a policy on testing in children and adolescents; if so, what are the criteria for testing and at what ages?
- •What is the diagnostic algorithm for testing for HCV, and use of serological testing and use of HCV RNA?
- •Is there a policy to treat children and adolescents; if so, at what age and with which regimens?
Questionnaire to 19 countries with high burden of paediatric HCV infection
- Razavi H.
- El-Sayed M.H.
Terminology
Manual for the development and assessment of national viral hepatitis plans: a provisional document.
Drug and Therapeutics Committee Training Course Participant’s Guide All Sessions.
Data analysis
World Bank. World Development Indicators – The World by Income and Region. Available from: https://datatopics.worldbank.org/world-development-indicators/the-world-by-income-and-region.html. [Accessed 01 Dec 2018].
Global hepatitis report.
Data availability
Results
WHO and professional society guidelines
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Guideline and year of publication | Screening in pregnancy | HCV testing of perinatally exposed children |
---|---|---|
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) 2020 [26] | All pregnant women should be tested for HCV infection, ideally at the initiation of prenatal care. | All children born to HCV-infected women should be tested for HCV infection. Testing is recommended using an antibody-based test at or after 18 months of age. Testing with an HCV-RNA assay can be considered in the first year of life, but the optimal timing of such a test is unknown. Repetitive testing by HCV RNA is not recommended. Children who are anti-HCV positive after 18 months of age should be tested with an HCV-RNA assay after age 3 years to confirm chronic hepatitis C infection. Siblings of children with vertically-acquired chronic HCV should be tested for HCV infection, if born from the same mother. |
European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) 2020 [27] | All pregnant women should be tested for HCV infection, ideally at early stages of pregnancy but testing can be carried out at any stage during pregnancy. | All children born to HCV-infected women should be tested for HCV infection from the age of 18 months. |
North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) 2020 [31] | No recommendation. | Antibody testing should be performed at 18 months of age. If requested by the family, the serum HCV RNA can be tested before 18 months of age; however, infants should be at least 2 months old. |
World Health Organization (WHO) 2018 [30] ,World Health Organization Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing. WHO,
Geneva2017 http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/254621/1/9789241549981-eng.pdf?ua=1 Date accessed: January 4, 2019 [44] World Health Organization Guidelines for the care and treatment of persons diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus infection. WHO,
Geneva2018 https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/273174/9789241550345-eng.pdf?ua=1 Date accessed: July 29, 2019 | Routine testing of all pregnant women for HCV infection is currently not recommended. Although, testing guidelines do recommend that information on risk factors for HCV infection should be communicated to pregnant women and that HCV testing should be considered alongside testing for HIV and HBV in high-endemic settings and for those with risk factors. | Infants whose mothers have been diagnosed with HCV should be followed up and routinely offered testing, and those diagnosed should be regularly monitored for signs of liver disease so that treatment can be offered when necessary. HCV infection in children under 18 months can be confirmed only by virological assays to detect HCV RNA, because transplacental maternal antibodies remain in the child’s bloodstream up until 18 months of age, making test results from serology assays ambiguous. |
Guideline and year of publication | Treatment in pregnancy | Children and adolescents: who to treat? | Children and adolescents: drug regimens recommended |
---|---|---|---|
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) 2020 [26] | Treatment during pregnancy is not recommended owing to the lack of safety and efficacy data. For women of reproductive age with known HCV infection, DAAs recommended before considering pregnancy, whenever practical and feasible, to reduce the risk of HCV transmission to future offspring. | Treatment is recommended for all children ≥3 years old because they will benefit from antiviral therapy regardless of disease severity. | GT 1 and GT 4–6: weight-based sofosbuvir (SOF) and ledipasvir (LED) for children aged ≥3 years. GT 1–6: weight-based SOF and velpatasvir (VEL) for children aged ≥6 years or weighing ≥17 kg. GT 1–6: glecaprevir (GLE) (300 mg) and pibrentasvir (PIB) (120 mg) for adolescents aged ≥12 years or weighing ≥45 kg. |
European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) 2018 [27] | HCV treatment during pregnancy is not recommended in the absence of safety and efficacy data. However, treatment can be considered during pregnancy, or in the case of accidental conception during treatment, on a case-by-case basis. Treatment regimens for use in pregnancy not specified. | Treatment is recommended for all children ≥3 years. | GT 1–6: fixed-dose combination of SOF (400 mg) and VEL (100 mg) or fixed-dose combination of GLE (300 mg) and PIB (120 mg) for adolescents aged ≥12 years who are treatment-naive or treatment-experienced and without cirrhosis or with compensated (Child-Pugh A) cirrhosis. GT 1–6: weight-based, fixed-dose combination of SOF/VEL or GLE/PIB for children aged 3–11 years (some formulations pending approval). |
European Society for Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (ESPGHAN) 2018 [28] | No recommendation. | All treatment-naive and treatment-experienced children with chronic HCV infection should be considered for therapy. Treatment can generally be deferred in younger age groups for which combined peginterferon and ribavirin is the only treatment option currently available. | GT 1 and 4: children >12 years old or who weigh >35 kg should be given a combination of SOF (400 mg) and LED (90 mg) in a single tablet administered once a day for 12 weeks; recommended duration of therapy for treatment-experienced children with GT 1 infection and compensated cirrhosis is 24 weeks. GT 2: children >12 years old or who weigh >35 kg should be given SOF (400 mg) once a day plus weight-based RBV (15 mg/kg in 2 divided doses) for 12 weeks. GT 3: children >12 years old or who weigh >35 kg should be given SOF (400 mg) once a day plus weight-based RBV (15 mg/kg in two divided doses) for 24 weeks. |
North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) 2020 [31] | No recommendation. | Treatment is recommended for all children >3 years old. | Currently approved and anticipated DAA regimens (details not specified). |
World Health Organization (WHO) 201830,44 | Treatment is not recommended during pregnancy. | Treatment should be offered to all individuals diagnosed with HCV infection who are ≥12 years old, irrespective of disease stage. | GT 1 and 4–6: SOF (400 mg) and LED (90 mg) for 12 weeks. GT 2: SOF (400 mg) plus weight-based RBV for 12 weeks. GT 3: SOF (400 mg) plus weight-based RBV for 24 weeks. |
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Guidelines for the care and treatment of persons diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
National strategies and guidelines
National policies in number (%) of countries | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Screen all pregnant women | Screen some pregnant women | Screen children born to mothers with HCV | Test other children and/or adolescents for HCV | Treat children and/or adolescents for HCV | ’Treat all’ but no policy specified for children | ||
Total n = 122 | 19 (16%) | 13 (11%) | 42 (34%) | 5 (4%) | 33 (27%) | 20 (16%) | |
By WHO region | |||||||
African n = 20 | 3 (15%) | 1 (5%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
Eastern Mediterranean n = 10 | 3 (30%) | 0 | 5 (50%) | 0 | 3 (30%) | 2 (20%) | |
European n = 44 | 8 (18%) | 8 (18%) | 18 (41%) | 2 (45%) | 17 (39%) | 10 (23%) | |
Americas n = 22 | 3 (14%) | 2 (9%) | 5 (23%) | 0 | 5 (23%) | 5 (23%) | |
South-East Asia n = 11 | 1 (9%) | 1 (9%) | 7 (64%) | 1 (9%) | 2 (18%) | 2 (18%) | |
Western Pacific n = 15 | 1 (7%) | 1 (7%) | 6 (40%) | 2 (13%) | 6 (40%) | 1 (7%) | |
By income classification | |||||||
High-income n = 46 | 4 (9%) | 9 (20%) | 17 (37%) | 0 | 13 (28%) | 12 (26%) | |
Upper middle-income n = 32 | 6 (19%) | 2 (6%) | 11 (34%) | 2 (6%) | 10 (31%) | 7 (22%) | |
Lower middle-income n = 27 | 7 (26%) | 1 (4%) | 13 (48%) | 2 (7%) | 9 (33%) | 1 (4%) | |
Low-income n = 17 | 2 (12%) | 1 (6%) | 1 (6%) | 1 (6%) | 1 (6%) | 0 | |
N/A | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Global overview of paediatric HCV policies

Policy landscape in 19 high paediatric burden countries
- Razavi H.
- El-Sayed M.H.

HCV screening in pregnancy
Country | Screening policy | Policy details How to test? When to test? |
---|---|---|
Bahrain | All | HCV antibody test. |
Cuba | All | HCV antibody test in the 3 trimesters of pregnancy. |
Dominican Republic | All | RNA test during the third trimester of pregnancy. |
Egypt | All | Establish viral hepatitis serologic surveillance among identified groups, including women receiving care at antenatal clinics. |
Georgia | All | Details not specified |
Ghana | All | Details not specified |
Guinea | All | Details not specified |
Hungary | All | Details not specified |
Kyrgyzstan | All | Details not specified |
Luxembourg | All | Details not specified |
Republic of Moldova | All | Details not specified |
Mongolia | All | Antibody test at the first antenatal visit (end of first trimester). |
Myanmar | All | Details not specified |
Pakistan | All | Details not specified |
Romania | All | Details not specified |
Russian Federation | All | Details not specified |
Rwanda | All | At first antenatal visit. |
Turkmenistan | All | Details not specified |
USA | All | At the initiation of prenatal care. |
Australia | At-risk | Details not specified |
Belarus | At-risk | Details not specified |
Belgium | At-risk | Details not specified |
Cameroon | At-risk | Details not specified |
Canada | At-risk | Details not specified |
Greece | At-risk | Details not specified |
Guatemala | At-risk | Details not specified |
Ireland | At-risk | Details not specified |
Nepal | At-risk | Details not specified |
Norway | At-risk | Details not specified |
Poland | In research settings | Details not specified |
Spain | At-risk | Details not specified |
UK | At-risk | HCV antibody testing in first or second trimester, with repeat test in third trimester for women with on-going risk factors with initial negative test. |
HCV testing in children and adolescents
Which children and adolescents to test
When to test children of HCV positive mothers
HCV treatment in children and adolescents
Country | Year | Paediatric treatment recommendations |
---|---|---|
Armenia | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds. | |
Brazil | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds. IFN and RBV for 3–12-year-olds regardless of hepatic enzyme abnormalities. |
Cambodia | 2019 | IFN and RBV for 2–18-year-olds. Treatment not recommended for children under the age of 2. HCV infected children to be monitored for liver disease progression. |
Chile | 2015 | IFN and RBV for 2–18-year-olds. Treat GT 1 and GT 4 for 48 weeks; and GT 2 and GT 3 for 24 weeks. |
China | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using: glecaprevir/pibrentasvir for all GTs with or without cirrhosis; sofosbuvir/ledipasvir for GT 1, 4, 5, and 6 and sofosbuvir and ribavirin for GT 2 and 3. |
Czech Republic | 2019 | DAAs (sofosbuvir/ledipasvir) for 12–18-year-olds or those >35 kg. Defer treatment for those under 12 years of age until DAAs are available. |
Dominican Republic | 2018 | DAAs for age groups in which DAA-based regimens are available. Treatment not recommended for children under the age of 3. |
Egypt, | n.a. | DAAs for 12–17-year-olds. |
Germany | 2018 | DAAs for age groups in which DAA-based regimens are available. Treatment not recommended for children under the age of 3. |
Greece | 2017 | DAAs for age groups in which DAA-based regimens are available. Treatment not recommended for children under the age of 3. |
Hungary | 2018 | DAAs (sofosbuvir and ledipasvir) for 12–18-year-olds or those >35 kg IFN and RBV for 3–12-year-olds. |
Iceland | 2016 | Treatment may be considered for 16–18-year-olds. |
Kazakhstan | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds. IFN and RBV for 3–12-year-olds in exceptional cases. |
Korea, Republic of | 2017 | IFN and RBV for 3–18-year-olds |
Kyrgyzstan | 2011 | Treatment for children indicated but regimen not specified. |
Latvia | 2017 | IFN and RBV for 2–18-year-olds |
Lebanon | n.a. | IFN and RBV |
Luxembourg | 2018 | Treatment for children indicated but regimen not specified. |
Malaysia | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using: sofosbuvir/ledipasvir for GT 1, 4, 5, and 6 and sofosbuvir and ribavirin for GT 2 and 3. |
Maldives | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using: sofosbuvir/ledipasvir for GT 1, 4, 5, and 6 and sofosbuvir and ribavirin for GT 2 and 3. |
Mexico | 2016 | IFN and RBV |
Moldova, Republic of | 2017 | Treatment for children indicated but regimen not specified. |
Mongolia | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using sofosbuvir/ledipasvir. |
Nepal | 2019 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using sofosbuvir/ledipasvir. |
Pakistan, | n.a. | IFN and RBV (guidelines) Defer treatment for those under 12 years of age until DAAs are available. |
Philippines | 2020 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using: sofosbuvir/velpastavir; glecaprevir/pibrentasvir; sofosbuvir/daclatasvir; sofosbuvir/daclatasvir. |
Poland | 2016 | IFN and RBV for 3–18-year-olds |
Russia | 2016 | Interferon-alpha AND ribavarin |
Sweden | 2018 | DAAs for 12–18-year-olds using: sofosbuvir/ledipasvir 12 weeks for GT 1 or 4 and sofosbuvir/ribavirin 12–24 weeks for GT 2 or 3 Option to use sofosbuvir/velpatasvir 12 weeks for GT 2 or 3 |
Ukraine,, | 2016 | IFN and RBV for 3–18-year-olds Treatment not recommended for children under the age of 3. |
UK | 2013 | IFN and RBV |
USA | 2018 | DAAs for age groups in which DAA-based regimens are available. Defer treatment for 3–12-year-olds until DAAs are available. |
Uzbekistan | 2011 | IFN and RBV |
- Razavi H.
- El-Sayed M.H.
Treatment in children
Treatment in adolescents
Discussion
Who to test
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Guidelines on hepatitis B and C testing.
Diagnostic algorithms for children born to HCV-infected women
Who to treat
Guidelines for the care and treatment of persons diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
What drug regimens to use
FDA approves two hepatitis C drugs for pediatric patients.
Sovaldi – Summary of opinion (post authorisation).
Maviret – Summary of opinion (post authorisation).
Guidelines for the care and treatment of persons diagnosed with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
Limitations of review
What are the policy implications of our findings?
Financial support
Authors’ contributions
Data availability
Conflicts of interest
Acknowledgements
Supplementary data
- Multimedia component 1
- Multimedia component 2
- Multimedia component 3
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