Bini Edmund J, Bräu Norbert, Currie Sue, Shen Hui, Anand Bhupinderjit S, Hu Ke-Qin, Jeffers Lennox, Ho Samuel B, Johnson David, Schmidt Warren N, King Paul, Cheung Ramsey, Morgan Timothy R, Awad Joseph, Pedrosa Marcos, Chang Kyong-Mi, Aytaman Ayse, Simon Franz, Hagedorn Curt, Moseley Richard, Ahmad Jawad, Mendenhall Charles, Waters Bradford, Strader Doris, Sasaki Anna W, Rossi Stephen, Wright Teresa L
VA New York Harbor Healthcare System and NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York 10010, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2005 Aug;100(8):1772-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1572-0241.2005.41860.x.
Many veterans may not be candidates for hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment due to contraindications to therapy. The aims of this study were to determine the proportion of HCV-infected veterans who were eligible for interferon alfa and ribavirin therapy and to evaluate barriers to HCV treatment.
We prospectively enrolled 4,084 veterans who were referred for HCV treatment over a 1-yr period at 24 Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Centers. Treatment candidacy was assessed using standardized criteria and the opinion of the treating clinician.
Overall, 32.2% (95% CI, 30.8-33.7%) were candidates for HCV treatment according to standardized criteria, whereas 40.7% (95% CI, 39.2-42.3%) were candidates in the opinion of the treating clinician. Multivariable analysis identified ongoing substance abuse (OR = 17.68; 95% CI, 12.24-25.53), comorbid medical disease (OR = 9.62; 95% CI, 6.85-13.50), psychiatric disease (OR = 9.45; 95% CI, 6.70-13.32), and advanced liver disease (OR = 8.43; 95% CI, 4.42-16.06) as the strongest predictors of not being a treatment candidate. Among patients who were considered treatment candidates, 76.2% (95% CI, 74.0-78.3%) agreed to be treated and multivariable analysis showed that persons >/=50 yr of age (OR = 1.37; 95% CI, 1.07-1.76) and those with >50 lifetime sexual partners (OR = 1.44; 95% CI, 1.08-1.93) were more likely to decline treatment.
The majority of veteran patients are not suitable candidates for HCV treatment because of substance abuse, psychiatric disease, and comorbid medical disease, and many who are candidates decline therapy. Multidisciplinary collaboration is needed to overcome barriers to HCV therapy in this population.
由于治疗存在禁忌证,许多退伍军人可能不适合接受丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)治疗。本研究的目的是确定符合干扰素α和利巴韦林治疗条件的HCV感染退伍军人的比例,并评估HCV治疗的障碍。
我们前瞻性地纳入了在24家退伍军人事务(VA)医疗中心1年期间被转诊接受HCV治疗的4084名退伍军人。使用标准化标准和主治医生的意见评估治疗候选资格。
总体而言,根据标准化标准,32.2%(95%CI,30.8 - 33.7%)的患者符合HCV治疗条件,而主治医生认为40.7%(95%CI,39.2 - 42.3%)的患者符合条件。多变量分析确定持续药物滥用(OR = 17.68;95%CI,12.24 - 25.53)、合并内科疾病(OR = 9.62;95%CI,6.85 - 13.50)、精神疾病(OR = 9.45;95%CI,6.70 - 13.32)和晚期肝病(OR = 8.43;95%CI,4.42 - 16.06)是不适合作为治疗候选者的最强预测因素。在被认为符合治疗条件的患者中,76.2%(95%CI, 74.0 - 78.3%)同意接受治疗,多变量分析显示年龄≥50岁(OR = 1.37;95%CI,1.07 - 1.76)和终身性伴侣超过50个(OR = 1.44;CI,1.08 - 1.93)的人更有可能拒绝治疗。
由于药物滥用、精神疾病和合并内科疾病,大多数退伍军人患者不适合接受HCV治疗,而且许多符合条件的患者拒绝治疗。需要多学科合作来克服该人群HCV治疗的障碍。