| Literature DB >> 11513756 |
R Patil1, S J Cotler, G Banaad-Omiotek, R A McNutt, M D Brown, S Cotler, D M Jensen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physicians' perspectives regarding hepatitis C shape their approach to patient management. We used utility analysis to evaluate physicians' perceptions of hepatitis C-related health states (HS) and their threshold to recommend treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11513756 PMCID: PMC37537 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230x-1-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Descriptions of hepatitis C health states and treatment side effects.
| Health State 1 | ||
| • | No physical symptoms | |
| • | May transmit to sexual partner | |
| • | May develop cirrhosis | |
| Health State 2 | ||
| • | Sometimes do not feel rested | |
| • | Tire more easily than usual | |
| • | May transmit to sexual partner | |
| • | May develop cirrhosis | |
| Health State 3 | ||
| • | Frequently do not feel rested | |
| • | Tire easily | |
| • | Limited in physical activities | |
| • | May transmit to sexual partner | |
| • | May develop cirrhosis | |
| Health State 4 | ||
| • | Sometimes do not feel rested | |
| • | Tire more easily than usual | |
| • | May transmit to sexual partner | |
| • | Have cirrhosis | |
| • | May get liver cancer | |
| • | May get liver failure | |
| Health State 5 | ||
| • | Sleep is disturbed | |
| • | Usually feel tired | |
| • | Limited in physical activities including work | |
| • | Little interest in sex | |
| • | Have cirrhosis | |
| • | May get liver cancer | |
| • | May need liver transplant | |
| Treatment Side Effects | ||
| • | Needle sticks three times a week | |
| • | Pills twice daily | |
| • | Flu-like symptoms | |
| • | Fever, chills, nausea, headache, poor | |
| appetite | ||
| • | Tend to improve after the first 2 weeks | |
| • | Tiredness, difficulty sleeping, irritability, | |
| difficulty concentrating | ||
| • | Chance of other non-life threatening | |
| medical problems that go away after | ||
| treatment is completed such as low blood | ||
| count, hair loss, and depression | ||
Physicians' Demographic Data
| n(%) | ||
| Age (mean ± SD) | 49 ± 13 | |
| Gender | ||
| Men | 85 (75%) | |
| Women | 28 (25%) | |
| Race | ||
| Caucasian | 73 (66%) | |
| Asian | 31 (28%) | |
| African American | 6 (5%) | |
| Other | 1 (1%) | |
| Degree | ||
| MD | 105 (93%) | |
| DO | 8 (7%) | |
| Specialty | ||
| Internal Medicine | 60 (55%) | |
| Family Practice | 29 (26%) | |
| Gastroenterology | 10 (9%) | |
| Emergency Medicine | 2 (2%) | |
| Other | 9 (8%) | |
| Treat Hepatitis C—yes/no | 25 (22%)/87 (78%) |
Figure 1Physicians' ratings of the hepatitis C health states and side effects of antiviral therapy. Box plots represent the median, interquartile range, and range. Outlying values are designated with (o). Preference values declined with increasing health state severity.
Figure 2Frequency distribution of the sustained response rate that participating physicians would require before recommending antiviral therapy to their patients. Median 60% (interquartile range 40–80%).