Fighting against viral hepatitis: Lessons from Taiwan by Ding-Shinn Chen
AbstractViral
hepatitis and its sequelae are important health problems worldwide,
including Taiwan. For the last 40 years, Taiwan's scientists and health
care providers have worked hard to control these sequelae, and the
results have been excellent. The author, Ding-Shinn Chen, had a key role
in planning and establishing the control program in Taiwan, and
participated in the endeavors from the very beginning. In this
perspective, he describes how he became interested in research as a
medical student, his encounters with hepatitis B and C, how he and his
colleagues started early detection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC),
how he helped Taiwan's government create and implement the Viral
Hepatitis Control Program, and how the effectiveness of the program in
the decrease of hepatitis B carriage and HCC was monitored. He also
discusses how he pioneered the use of interferon-α plus ribavirin to
treat chronic hepatitis C. Hepatitis B viral load as a risk factor for
HCC and cirrhosis in hepatitis B surface antigen carriers is reviewed
briefly, as is the prevention of sequelae by antiviral therapies.
Finally, Dr. Chen discusses unresolved issues that must be addressed and
predicts the changes of the patterns of liver disease in Taiwan beyond
the mid-21st century, which is in part affected by the fight against
viral hepatitis that was initiated in the early 1980s. Conclusion:
Dr. Chen's perspective illustrates Taiwan's fight against viral
hepatitis over the last 40 years. This experience can be shared by other
countries in which the disease is equally prevalent. (HEPATOLOGY 2011;)
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