| Literature DB >> 35895360 |
Malini B DeSilva1,2, Ann Settgast1,3,4,2, Ella Chrenka1, Amy J Kodet1, Patricia F Walker1,3,2.
Abstract
In the United States, there is poor clinician adherence to the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease and other guidelines for chronic hepatitis B virus (CHB) management. This prospective cohort study evaluated whether a CHB registry improves CHB management. We included patients with CHB aged ≥ 18 years and who had a clinical encounter during September 1, 2016-August 31, 2019. We divided patients into three groups based on care received before September 1, 2019: 1) CIH: primary care clinician at HealthPartners Center for International Health, 2) GI: not CIH and seen by gastroenterology within previous 18 months, and 3) primary care (PC): not CIH and not seen by gastroenterology within previous 18 months. We created and implemented a CHB registry at CIH that allowed staff to identify and perform outreach to patients overdue for CHB management. Patients with laboratory testing (i.e., alanine transaminase and hepatitis B virus DNA) and hepatocellular carcinoma screening in the previous 12 months were considered up to date (UTD). We compared UTD rates between groups at baseline (September 1, 2019) and pilot CHB registry end (February 28, 2020). We evaluated 4,872 patients, 52% of whom were female: 213 CIH, 656 GI, and 4,003 PC. At baseline, GI patients were most UTD (69%) followed by CIH (51%) and PC (11%). At pilot end the percent of UTD patients at CIH increased by 11%, GI decreased by 10%, and PC was unchanged. CHB registry use standardized care and increased the percent of CHB patients with recent laboratory testing and HCC screening.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35895360 PMCID: PMC9294691 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-1013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 3.707
Baseline patient demographic information and medical history for patients seen within HealthPartners (HP) care system during September 1, 2016–August 31, 2019
| CIH, | GI,* | PC, | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR) | 46 (34–60) | 46 (38–59) | 47 (37–59) |
| Sex, female, no. (%) | 86 (40.4) | 324 (49.4) | 2,109 (52.7) |
| Race/ethnicity, no. (%) | |||
| Asian | 153 (71.8) | 394 (60.1) | 1,534 (37.8) |
| Black | 58 (27.2) | 196 (29.8) | 1,536 (38.4) |
| White | 0 | 48 (7.3) | 718 (17.9) |
| Unknown | 0 | 7 (1.1) | 112 (2.8) |
| Other | 2 (0.9) | 5 (0.8) | 83 (2.1) |
| Multiple races | 0 | 4 (0.6) | 25 (0.6) |
| Hispanic | 0 | 1 (0.2) | 9 (0.2) |
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 0 | 1 (0.2) | 6 (0.2) |
| Country of origin,† no. (%) | Myanmar 58 (27.2) | U.S. 98 (14.9) | U.S. 829 (20.7) |
| Vietnam 40 (18.8) | Vietnam 81 (12.4) | Somalia 329 (8.2) | |
| Somalia 23 (10.8) | Laos 56 (8.5) | Vietnam 209 (5.2) | |
| Ethiopia 21 (9.9) | Somalia 46 (7.0) | Laos 193 (4.8) | |
| Laos 18 (8.5) | Ethiopia 36 (5.5) | Ethiopia 164 (4.1) | |
| Cambodia 17 (8.0) | China 29 (4.4) | Liberia 163 (4.1) | |
| Missing 3 (1.4) | Missing 144 (21.9) | Missing 1375 (34.4) | |
| Primary language,† no. (%) | Karen 64 (30.0) | English 428 (65.1) | English 2,722 (68.0) |
| Vietnamese 37 (17.4) | Vietnamese 70 (10.7) | Somali 361 (9.0) | |
| English 33 (15.5) | Hmong 29 (4.4) | Vietnamese 224 (5.6) | |
| Somali 19 (8.9) | Somali 28 (4.3) | Hmong 144 (3.6) | |
| Cambodian 15 (7.0) | Cambodian 19 (2.9) | Karen 97 (2.4) | |
| Oromo 13 (6.1) | Karen 16 (2.4) | Cambodian 79 (2.0) | |
| Missing 0 | Missing 0 | Missing 5 (0.1) | |
| Interpreter requested for healthcare encounters, no. (%) | 175 (82.2) | 200 (30.5) | 1,043 (26.1) |
| Health insurance, no. (%) | |||
| Medicaid | 136 (63.8) | 247 (37.7) | 1,430 (35.7) |
| Medicare | 32 (15.0) | 63 (9.6) | 417 (10.4) |
| Private | 37 (17.4) | 312 (47.6) | 1848 (46.2) |
| Dual Insurance | 1 (0.5) | 9 (1.4) | 35 (0.8) |
| None | 0 | 1 (0.2) | 3 (0.1) |
| Missing | 7 (3.3) | 24 (3.7) | 270 (6.7) |
| History of CHB treatment,‡ no. (%) | 59 (27.7) | 317 (48.3) | 324 (8.1) |
| Most recent HBV DNA > 2,000, no. (%) | 36 (16.9) | 159 (24.2) | 345 (8.6) |
| Most recent ALT elevated (> 40), no. (%) | 39 (18.3) | 128 (19.5) | 590 (14.7) |
| Positive HBsAg on file, no. (%) | 200 (93.0) | 590 (89.9) | 2,786 (69.6) |
| Comorbid conditions,§ no. (%) | |||
| Hepatitis C | 3 (1.4) | 16 (2.4) | 157 (3.9) |
| HIV | 1 (0.5) | 10 (1.5) | 117 (2.9) |
| Cirrhosis | 12 (5.6) | 86 (13.1) | 119 (3.0) |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 1 (0.4) | 11 (1.7) | 17 (0.4) |
ALT = alanine transaminase; CHB = chronic hepatitis B; CIH = HealthPartners Center for International Health; GI = HealthPartners Gastroenterology; HBsAg = hepatitis B surface antigen; HBV = hepatitis B virus; IQR = interquartile range; PC = HealthPartners Primary Care. Patients were 18 years or older as of September 1, 2019, and met our case definition for chronic hepatitis B (i.e., presence of hepatitis B surface antigen or detectable HBV DNA in most recent laboratory result available in the HP electronic health record during July 19, 1989–August 31, 2019), N = 4,872. Data are n (%) unless otherwise noted.
Seen by GI at least two times ever; the most recent visit must have occurred within the 18 months before September 1, 2019.
Six most common for each group.
Prescription for at least one of the following during September 1, 2016–August 31, 2019: abacavir sulfate-lamivudine, abacavir-lamivudine-zidovudine, adefovir dipivoxil, efavirenz-emtricitabine-tenofovir, emtricitabine, emtricitabine-tenofovir, entecavir, lamivudine, lamivudine-zidovudine, peginterferon alfa-2A, tenofovir alafenamide, or tenofovir disoproxil.
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-9 and ICD-10 codes used for identification of comorbid conditions: hepatitis C (ICD-9 = V02.62, 070.44, 070.51, 070.54, 070.62, 070.70, 070.71; ICD-10 = B17.10, B18.2, B19.20); HIV (ICD-9 = 042; ICD-10 = B20); cirrhosis (ICD-9 = K74.60, K71.7, K74.69; ICD-10 = 571.5); hepatocellular carcinoma (ICD-9 = 155.0; ICD-10 = C22.0).
Percent of patients noted to be up-to-date* for chronic hepatitis B management in three care groups, 1) CIH pilot both as one group and divided into two groups for exploratory analysis based on whether the patients had been seen by a liver specialist (CIH + GI), 2) GI, and 3) HP PC at baseline (September 1, 2019) and pilot registry end date (February 28, 2020); N = 4,872
| CIH | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIH, | CIH + GI/ CIH no GI, | GI, | PC, | |
| Baseline | 51% | 81%/35% | 69% | 11% |
| Pilot registry end date | 62% | 79%/54% | 59% | 10% |
CIH = HealthPartners Center for International Health; GI = HealthPartners Gastroenterology; PC = HealthPartners Primary Care.
Alanine transaminase and hepatitis B virus DNA laboratory testing as well as hepatocellular carcinoma screening by ultrasound, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, or magnetic resonance study performed within the 12 months of selected time points.
Frequency of individual laboratory tests and liver imaging for three care groups, 1) CIH pilot, 2) GI, and 3) HP PC performed within 6 months prior to hepatitis B registry start (September 1, 2019) or end (February 28, 2020), N = 4,872
| 6 Months preregistry start (3/1/2019– 8/31/2019), no. (%) | 6 Months before registry end (9/1/2019– 2/28/2020), no. (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| CIH, | ||
| ALT | 104 (48.8) | 119 (55.9) |
| HBV DNA | 93 (43.7) | 109 (51.2) |
| HCC screening = AFP + imaging | 57 (26.8) | 72 (33.8) |
| HCC screening = only AFP | 16 (7.5) | 13 (6.1) |
| HCC screening = only imaging | 31 (14.6) | 36 (16.9) |
| GI, | ||
| ALT | 420 (64.0) | 340 (51.8) |
| HBV DNA | 372 (56.7) | 285 (43.4) |
| HCC screening = AFP + imaging | 144 (22.0) | 101 (15.4) |
| HCC screening = only AFP | 44 (6.7) | 29 (4.4) |
| HCC screening = only imaging | 204 (31.1) | 163 (24.8) |
| PC, | ||
| ALT | 1,098 (27.4) | 1,006 (25.1) |
| HBV DNA | 493 (12.1) | 399 (10.0) |
| HCC screening = AFP + imaging | 125 (3.1) | 92 (2.3) |
| HCC screening = only AFP | 32 (0.8) | 55 (1.4) |
| HCC screening = only imaging | 311 (7.8) | 262 (6.5) |
AFP = alpha-fetoprotein; ALT = alanine transaminase; CHB = chronic hepatitis B; CIH = HealthPartners Center for International Health; GI = HealthPartners Gastroenterology; HBsAg = hepatitis B surface antigen; HBV = hepatitis B virus; HCC = hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance; PC = HealthPartners Primary Care. Data are n (%) unless otherwise noted.
Odds of maintaining UTD* status for patients with chronic HBV infection at 6 months for those who were UTD at baseline and odds of achieving UTD status at 6 months for those who were not UTD at baseline for three groups, 1) CIH pilot, 2) Gastroenterology, and 3) HP PC; N = 4,872
| Odds of | CIH, | CIH + GI/ CIH no GI, | GI, | PC, | Odds ratio (95% confidence interval) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIH Pilot vs. GI | CIH Pilot vs. PC | Within CIH: CIH + GI vs. CIH no GI | |||||
| Maintaining | 8.8 | 6.6 / 15.3 | 3.3 | 1.9 | 2.6† (1.4–5.1) | 4.7† (2.5–9.1) | 0.4 (0.1–1.7) |
| Achieving | 0.5 | 1.0 / 0.5 | 0.21 | 0.04 | 2.4† (1.4–4.2) | 13.7† (8.8–21.3) | 2.1 (0.7–6.7) |
CIH = HealthPartners Center for International Health; GI = HealthPartners Gastroenterology; HBV = hepatitis B virus; PC = HealthPartners Primary Care.
Up-to-date (UTD) = alanine transaminase and HBV DNA laboratory testing as well as hepatocellular carcinoma screening by ultrasound, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, or magnetic resonance study performed within 12 months of selected time points.
P < 0.05 as determined by chi-square test.
Sensitivity analysis: percent of confirmed (CHB) patients noted to be UTD* for CHB management in three care groups: 1) CIH pilot, both as one group and divided into two groups for exploratory analysis based on whether the patients had been seen by a liver specialist (CIH + GI); 2) GI; and 3) HP PC at baseline (September 1, 2019) and pilot registry end date (February 28, 2020); n = 2,463
| CIH | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIH, | CIH + GI/ CIH no GI, | GI, | PC, | |
| Baseline | 57% | 81%/40% | 71% | 16% |
| Pilot registry end date | 67% | 79%/59% | 60% | 15% |
CHB = chronic hepatitis B; CIH = HealthPartners Center for International Health; GI = HealthPartners Gastroenterology; HBV = hepatitis B virus; PC = HealthPartners Primary Care.
Up-to-date (UTD) = alanine transaminase and hepatitis B virus DNA laboratory testing as well as hepatocellular carcinoma screening by ultrasound, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, or magnetic resonance study performed within the 12 months of selected time points.