3.2 million
Americans infected with hepatitis C
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50
Percent of those Americans who don't know they have the disease
2/3
Ratio of infected Americans who are baby boomers. The spread "has a lot do do with casual needle injection-drug use back in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s," says Amy Norton at Reuters.
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1/33
Ratio of Americans born between 1945 and 1964 who have hepatitis C
18,000
New hepatitis C infections per year
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75 to 85
Percentage of hepatitis C infections that become chronic, potentially causing "serious diseases like cirrhosis (scarring of the liver) and liver cancer," says Norton.
15,100
Americans killed by hepatitis C in 2007, the most recent year for which data is available
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12,700
Americans killed by HIV in 2007
82,000
Estimated deaths that could be prevented if all Americans born between 1945 and 1965 agreed to a one-time hepatitis C screening, according to the CDC. "Most people don't know they're infected with hepatitis C until decades later," says Rita Rubin at Web MD, "when routine blood tests uncover liver damage caused by the virus over time."
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$2,900
Cost of screening an adult for hepatitis C
45
Percent of hepatitis C patients who are cured if treated with two generic medicines, interferon and ribavirin
70
Percent of hepatitis C patients who are cured if two recently approved drugs, Incivek and Victrelis, are added to the regimen
$50,000
Cost of the Incivek treatment
$26,000 to $48,000
Cost of the Victrelis treatment
$100,000
Low-end cost of a liver transplant
Sources: Associated Press, Reuters, Web MD
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