| Literature DB >> 34125052 |
James S Ford1, Tasleem Chechi1, Kavian Toosi1, Bilawal Mahmood1, Dillon Meehleis1, Michella Otmar1, Nam Tran2, Larissa May1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In 2019 the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) released draft guidelines recommending universal hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening for individuals aged 18-79. We aimed to assess the efficacy of an emergency department-based HCV screening program, by comparing screening practices before and after its implementation.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34125052 PMCID: PMC8203013 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2021.1.49667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Figure 1Operational model of the hepatitis C screening program in the emergency department.
HCV, hepatitis C; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; Ab, antibody; BPA, best practice advisory.
Patient characteristics by study period.
| Characteristic | Pre-BPA (n = 218) | Post-BPA (n = 14,981) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 50 (34–62) | 47 (33–59) | 0.09 |
| Gender | |||
| Male | 130 (60%) | 7,273 (49%) | <0.001 |
| Female | 88 (40%) | 7,706 (51%) | |
| Race/ethnicity | |||
| White | 135 (64%) | 8,970 (60%) | 0.40 |
| Black | 38 (18%) | 2,903 (20%) | 0.60 |
| Asian | 9 (4%) | 1,124 (8%) | 0.07 |
| Mixed/other | 30 (14%) | 1,784 (12%) | 0.34 |
| Hispanic | 34 (17%) | 3,351 (23%) | 0.05 |
Age reported as median (Q1–Q3) and analyzed between study periods using Mann-Whitney U test. Categorical variables reported as number (%) and analyzed between study periods using Fisher’s exact test.
Gender data missing for two patients in post-BPA period.
Race data missing for 6 patients in pre-BPA and 200 patients in post-BPA group. Ethnicity data (Hispanic vs non-Hispanic) were missing in 16 patients in the pre-BPA group and 177 patients in the post-BPA group.
BPA, best practice advisory.
Figure 2Hepatitis C virus testing schematic for the post-best practice advisory period.
*Data for unique patients 18 years of age and born after 1945.
**Testing was initiated by physician on the basis of perceived Hepatitis C risk behaviors or clinical manifestations of infection.
EHR, electronic health record; BPA, best practice advisory; ABHCV, antibody-hepatitis C virus.
Hepatitis C virus test results by screening period.
| Pre-BPA | Post-BPA | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-HCV Ab | N = 218 | N = 14,981 | |
| Reactive | 51 (23%) | 1,340 (9%) | <0.001 |
| Nonreactive | 166 (76%) | 13,598 (91%) | |
| Indeterminate | 1 (<1%) | 43 (<1%) | |
| HCV VL | N = 6 | N = 1,225 | |
| Detected | 3 (50%) | 563 (46%) | 1.0 |
| Not detected | 3 (50%) | 662 (54%) |
Values expressed as percentage (number). Comparisons between study periods made via Fisher’s exact test.
Reflex viral load testing was not performed during the pre-BPA period. Reflex VL testing was not available for 106 patients in the post-BPA group who underwent anti-HCV Ab testing.
Includes 14,702 patients tested via BPA-initiated testing and 279 patients tested via clinician-initiated testing.
Ab, antibody; BPA, best practice advisory; HCV, hepatitis C virus; VL, viral load.