| Literature DB >> 20663140 |
Monica C Robotin1, Melanie Q Kansil, Jacob George, Kirsten Howard, Steven Tipper, Miriam Levy, Nghi Phung, Andrew G Penman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Australians born in countries where hepatitis B infection is endemic are 6-12 times more likely to develop hepatocellular cancer (HCC) than Australian-born individuals. However, a program of screening, surveillance and treatment of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) in high risk populations could significantly reduce disease progression and death related to end-stage liver disease and HCC. Consequently we are implementing the B Positive pilot project, aiming to optimise the management of CHB in at-risk populations in south-west Sydney. Program participants receive routine care, enhanced disease surveillance or specialist referral, according to their stage of CHB infection, level of viral load and extent of liver injury. In this paper we examine the program's potential impact on health services utilisation in the study area.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20663140 PMCID: PMC2918596 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1.
General assumptions of the Markov model of HCC prevention
| Assumption | How they were addressed and rationale |
|---|---|
| Recruitment of | Target population age ≥ 35, HBsAg + ve for ≥ 6 months, born in China, Hong Kong, Vietnam |
| Contact testing and immunisation | Not factored into the model |
| Seroprevalence data in target populations | Data provided by Nguyen et al [ |
| • 10.7% for people born in China | |
| • 10.5% for people born in Vietnam | |
| • 7.7% for people born in Hong Kong | |
| Initial testing to confirm CHB | Not factored in GP consultation calculations |
| Program participation rates | Base case assumption is 25% of eligible people enrolled |
| Follow up requirements | • Routine surveillance arm: 2 GP appointments/year |
| • Enhanced HCC surveillance arm: 2 GP appointments/year | |
| • Interferon treatment: 6 specialist appointments/year | |
| • Entecavir treatment (includes those with liver failure): 4 specialist appointments/year | |
| • Patients with HCC: assumed monthly follow up | |
| Viral load distribution by age | Based upon REVEAL study, [ |
| ALT cut-off levels | ALT≥ 1.5 × ULN triggers further evaluation in the absence of clinical data; ULN differentiated by participant age |
| Progression rates through disease stages | Constant over time |
| Patients with high VL and abnormal liver function | 30% receive first line interferon for 12 months |
| • 30% seroconvert and receive no further treatment | |
| • 70% commence entecavir the following year | |
| 70% receive entecavir as first-line treatment | |
| • 20% seroconvert in the first year of entecavir treatment and receive no further treatment | |
| • 80% continue lifelong entecavir | |
| Patients with liver failure | All receive entecavir |
VL: viral load
ALT: alanine aminotransferase
HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen
Estimated numbers of chronic hepatitis B cases in B Positive project target areas*
| Number of people in the target population/estimated HBV seroprevalence | People born in Vietnam/10.5% | People born in China/10.7% | People born in Hong Kong/ | Total in target countries of birth | All others/ | Total CHB cases, irrespective of country of birth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5,044 | 2,625 | 237 | 7,905 | 3,814 | 11,720 | |
*Target areas: Fairfield, Liverpool, Bankstown, Canterbury and Auburn are Local Government Areas in the Greater Sydney metropolitan area
Target population: people born in Vietnam, China and Hong Kong in the program target area
Estimated annual GP, specialist and liver ultrasound appointments required in year 4 of the program and sensitivity analysis of incremental service utilisation, compared to baseline (no program)
| Treatment group | Number of people* | Annual appointments related to CHB surveillance and/or treatment | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP appointments | Specialist | Ultrasound | ||
| 745 | 1,303 | |||
| 263 | 460 | 263 | ||
| 8 | 44 | 7 | ||
| 201 | 781 | 195 | ||
| 236 | 18 | 8 | ||
| 1,452 | 1,763 | 843 | 473 | |
| 1,452 | 28 | 84 | 54 | |
| | 0 | |||
| | 0 | |||
| | ||||
| | 2 | |||
| 0 | ||||
| 0 | ||||
| 0 | ||||
| 0 | ||||
*Estimated at Year 4, after recruitment has been completed
** other = HCC diagnoses (n = 2); HbeAG seroconversions (n = 47); program dropouts (n = 187)
Estimated incremental use of GP, specialist, and ultrasound services appointments over the life of the program
| Year | Incremental appointments per program year | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP | Specialist | Ultrasound | ||
| 406 | 169 | 99 | ||
| 1,165 | 483 | 282 | ||
| 1,808 | 758 | 436 | ||
| 1,734 | 759 | 419 | ||
| 1,628 | 765 | 402 | ||
| 1,346 | 718 | 379 | ||
| 1,030 | 561 | 291 | ||
| 776 | 433 | 213 | ||
| 574 | 340 | 158 | ||
| 413 | 266 | 116 | ||
| 284 | 200 | 82 | ||
| 183 | 142 | 56 | ||
| 109 | 93 | 36 | ||
| 58 | 57 | 21 | ||
* Assumes recruitment is completed in year 4
For years 6-50, we calculated the mid-point figures for each 5 year period
Figure 2Estimated incremental GP, specialist, and ultrasound services per year over the life of the program.