Hepatitis C Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Hepatitis C stocks.

Hepatitis C Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 27 ABBV AbbVie Inc (ABBV) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Surpassing Expectations with ...
Apr 27 ABBV Q1 2024 AbbVie Inc Earnings Call
Apr 26 ABBV Abbvie stock falls amid growing biosimilar competition
Apr 26 ABBV Why AbbVie Stock Stumbled Today Despite the Earnings Beat
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie (ABBV) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 26 BMY Bristol, Sanofi, Takeda gain positive CHMP recommendations
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie stock slides 6% amid concerns about falling Humira sales
Apr 26 ABBV Tech Stocks Rebound As Magnificent 7 Roar On Strong Earnings, Energy Giants Tumble: What's Driving Markets Friday?
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie Inc. (ABBV) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie (ABBV) Beats on Q1 Earnings & Sales, Ups '24 EPS View
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie's Q1: Positive Surprise
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie Q1 report beats Street despite plunging Humira sales
Apr 26 ABBV Top 20 biopharma kick off 9.6% market cap surge in Q1 2024 amid Medicare price talks
Apr 26 ABBV PCE/Core PCE Numbers Came In Line With Expectations
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie off 3% despite quarterly beats, 2024 guidance raise
Apr 26 ABBV PCE In-Line to Warmer, Pre-Market Calms; ABBV Beats, XOM Misses
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie (ABBV) Reports Q1 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie Raises Earnings Guidance Even as Humira Sales Continue to Drop
Apr 26 ABBV Ex-Humira Growth Platform Drives AbbVie's Q1 Performance, Drugmaker Lifts Annual Profit Outlook
Apr 26 ABBV AbbVie Inc (ABBV) Q1 2024 Earnings: Adjusted EPS Tops Estimates Despite Revenue Challenges
Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C is an infectious disease caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV) that primarily affects the liver. During the initial infection people often have mild or no symptoms. Occasionally a fever, dark urine, abdominal pain, and yellow tinged skin occurs. The virus persists in the liver in about 75% to 85% of those initially infected. Early on chronic infection typically has no symptoms. Over many years however, it often leads to liver disease and occasionally cirrhosis. In some cases, those with cirrhosis will develop complications such as liver failure, liver cancer, or dilated blood vessels in the esophagus and stomach.HCV is spread primarily by blood-to-blood contact associated with intravenous drug use, poorly sterilized medical equipment, needlestick injuries in healthcare, and transfusions. Using blood screening, the risk from a transfusion is less than one per two million. It may also be spread from an infected mother to her baby during birth. It is not spread by superficial contact. It is one of five known hepatitis viruses: A, B, C, D, and E. Diagnosis is by blood testing to look for either antibodies to the virus or its RNA. Testing is recommended in all people who are at risk.There is no vaccine against hepatitis C. Prevention includes harm reduction efforts among people who use intravenous drugs and testing donated blood. Chronic infection can be cured about 95% of the time with antiviral medications such as sofosbuvir or simeprevir. Peginterferon and ribavirin were earlier generation treatments that had a cure rate of less than 50% and greater side effects. Getting access to the newer treatments however can be expensive. Those who develop cirrhosis or liver cancer may require a liver transplant. Hepatitis C is the leading reason for liver transplantation, though the virus usually recurs after transplantation.An estimated 143 million people (2%) worldwide are infected with hepatitis C as of 2015. In 2013 about 11 million new cases occurred. It occurs most commonly in Africa and Central and East Asia. About 167,000 deaths due to liver cancer and 326,000 deaths due to cirrhosis occurred in 2015 due to hepatitis C. The existence of hepatitis C – originally identifiable only as a type of non-A non-B hepatitis – was suggested in the 1970s and proven in 1989. Hepatitis C infects only humans and chimpanzees.

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