Huckans Marilyn S, Blackwell Aaron D, Harms Todd A, Indest David W, Hauser Peter
Northwest Hepatitis C Resource Center, Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
AIDS. 2005 Oct;19 Suppl 3:S106-15. doi: 10.1097/01.aids.0000192078.49185.b0.
To examine hepatitis C virus (HCV) and HIV testing patterns within the Northwest Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN 20).
Using a comprehensive VISN 20 database, we retrospectively reviewed medical records of 293,445 veterans.
32.8% of patients were tested for HCV, 5.5% were tested for HIV, and 4.3% were co-tested. Of those tested, 12.3% were HCV positive, 5.4% were HIV positive, and 1.6% were co-infected. 79.1% of HIV-positive patients were tested for HCV, 29.2% of whom tested positive. 34.8% of HCV-positive patients were tested for HIV, 4.9% of whom tested positive. Of those tested, HCV-positive patients were significantly more likely than HCV-negative patients to test positive for HIV; HIV-positive patients were no more likely to test positive for HCV than HIV-negative patients. HIV-positive patients with substance use disorders (SUD) were significantly more likely to test HCV positive than those without. Within the total sample, veterans with SUD were significantly more likely to be tested for both diseases and to test positive for HCV but not HIV. After controlling for other categories of SUD, veterans with a history of cocaine abuse compared with those without were at an increased risk of HIV infection and co-infection.
79.1% of HIV-positive but only 34.8% of HCV-positive veterans were co-tested, suggesting barriers to HIV testing may exist in VISN 20. Results also indicate that HCV-positive patients are at increased risk for HIV infection and that HIV-positive patients with SUD are at increased risk of HCV infection; routine co-testing for these patients is therefore warranted. Given significant co-infection rates, HCV and HIV screening and testing should be increasingly integrated. Increased infection rates among patients with SUD also warrant integration of HCV and HIV screening and testing into mental health and addiction programmes.
研究西北退伍军人综合服务网络(VISN 20)内丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)和人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)检测模式。
利用VISN 20的综合数据库,我们回顾性审查了293,445名退伍军人的医疗记录。
32.8%的患者接受了HCV检测,5.5%接受了HIV检测,4.3%接受了联合检测。在接受检测的患者中,12.3%为HCV阳性,5.4%为HIV阳性,1.6%为合并感染。79.1%的HIV阳性患者接受了HCV检测,其中29.2%检测呈阳性。34.8%的HCV阳性患者接受了HIV检测,其中4.9%检测呈阳性。在接受检测的患者中,HCV阳性患者比HCV阴性患者HIV检测呈阳性的可能性显著更高;HIV阳性患者HCV检测呈阳性的可能性并不比HIV阴性患者更高。有物质使用障碍(SUD)的HIV阳性患者HCV检测呈阳性的可能性显著高于无该障碍的患者。在总样本中,有SUD的退伍军人接受两种疾病检测以及HCV检测呈阳性但HIV检测呈阴性的可能性显著更高。在控制了其他SUD类别后,有可卡因滥用史的退伍军人与无该病史的退伍军人相比,HIV感染和合并感染的风险增加。
79.1%的HIV阳性退伍军人接受了联合检测,但只有34.8%的HCV阳性退伍军人接受了联合检测,这表明VISN 20中可能存在HIV检测的障碍。结果还表明,HCV阳性患者HIV感染风险增加,有SUD的HIV阳性患者HCV感染风险增加;因此,对这些患者进行常规联合检测是必要的。鉴于显著的合并感染率,HCV和HIV筛查与检测应日益整合。SUD患者中感染率的增加也促使将HCV和HIV筛查与检测纳入心理健康和成瘾项目。