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High priority for hepatitis C screening in safety net hospitals: Results from a prospective cohort of 4582 hospitalized baby boomers
Author(s) -
Turner Barbara J.,
Taylor Barbara S.,
Hanson Joshua,
Liang Yuanyuan,
Veerapaneni Poornachand,
Villarreal Roberto,
Perez Mary,
Hernandez Ludivina,
Sandhu Jasdeep,
Fiebelkorn Kristin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.28018
Subject(s) - medicine , cohort , cirrhosis , odds ratio , hepatitis c
Low‐income populations are disproportionately affected by hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Thus, implementing baby boomer screening (born 1945‐1965) for HCV may be a high priority for safety net hospitals. We report the prevalence and predictors of HCV infection and advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis based on the Fibrosis‐4 score plus imaging for a baby boomer cohort admitted to a safety net hospital over a 21‐month interval with >9 months of follow‐up. Anti‐HCV antibody testing was performed for 4582, or 90%, of all never‐screened patients, of whom 312 (6.7%) tested positive. Adjusted odds ratios of testing anti‐HCV‐positive were 2.66 for men versus women ( P  < 0.001), 1.25 for uninsured versus insured ( P  = 0.06), 0.70 for Hispanics versus non‐Hispanic whites ( P  = 0.005), and 0.93 per year of age ( P  < 0.001). Among 287 patients tested for HCV RNA (91% of all anti‐HCV‐positive cases), 175 (61%) were viremic (3.8% overall prevalence in cohort), which was 5% less likely per year of age ( P  < 0.03). Noninvasive staging of 148 (84.6%) chronic HCV patients identified advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis in 50 (33.8%), with higher adjusted odds ratios of 3.21 for Hispanics versus non‐Hispanic whites/Asians ( P = 0.02) and 1.18 per year of age ( P = 0.001). Other factors associated with significantly higher adjusted odds ratios of advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis were alcohol abuse/dependence, obesity, and being uninsured. Conclusion : In this low‐income, hospitalized cohort, 4% of 4582 screened baby boomers were diagnosed with chronic HCV, nearly twice the rate in the community; one‐third had noninvasive testing that indicated advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis, which was significantly more likely for Hispanics, those of older age, those with obesity, those with alcohol abuse/dependence, and those who lacked insurance. (H epatology 2015;62:1388–1395)

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