British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Int J Infect Dis. 2021 May;106:246-253. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2021.03.061. Epub 2021 Mar 23.
Addressing the needs of ethnic minorities will be key to finding undiagnosed individuals living with hepatitis B (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV), or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). To inform screening initiatives in British Columbia (BC), Canada, the factors associated with HBV and/or HCV and/or HIV infection among different ethnic groups within a large population-based cohort were assessed.
Persons diagnosed with HBV, HCV, or HIV in BC between 1990 and 2015 were grouped as East Asian, South Asian, Other Visible Minority (African, Central Asian, Latin American, Pacific Islander, West Asian, unknown ethnicity), and Not a Visible Minority, using a validated name-recognition software. Factors associated with infection within each ethnic group were assessed with multivariable multinomial logistic regression models.
Participants included 202 521 East Asians, 126 070 South Asians, 65 210 Other Visible Minorities, and 1 291 561 people who were Not a Visible Minority, 14.4%, 3.3%, 4.5%, and 6.3% of whom had HBV and/or HCV and/or HIV infections, respectively. Injection drug use was most prevalent among infection-positive people who were Not a Visible Minority (22.1%), and was strongly associated with HCV monoinfection, HBV/HCV coinfection, and HCV/HIV coinfection, but not with HBV monoinfection among visible ethnic minorities. Extreme material deprivation and social deprivation were more prevalent than injection drug use or problematic alcohol use among visible ethnic minorities.
Risk factor distributions varied among persons diagnosed with HBV and/or HCV and/or HIV of differing ethnic backgrounds, with lower substance use prevalence among visible minority populations. This highlights the need for tailored approaches to infection screening among different ethnic groups.
满足少数民族的需求对于发现乙型肝炎(HBV)、丙型肝炎(HCV)或人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染者至关重要。为了为加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)的筛查计划提供信息,评估了在一个大型基于人群的队列中,不同族裔群体中与 HBV 和/或 HCV 和/或 HIV 感染相关的因素。
使用经过验证的名称识别软件,将 1990 年至 2015 年期间在 BC 被诊断患有 HBV、HCV 或 HIV 的患者分为东亚人、南亚人、其他少数族裔(非洲人、中亚人、拉丁美洲人、太平洋岛民、西亚人、未知种族)和非少数族裔。使用多变量多项逻辑回归模型评估每个族裔群体中与感染相关的因素。
参与者包括 202521 名东亚人、126070 名南亚人、65210 名其他少数族裔和 1291561 名非少数族裔,分别有 14.4%、3.3%、4.5%和 6.3%的人患有 HBV 和/或 HCV 和/或 HIV 感染。在非少数族裔中,注射毒品使用在感染阳性人群中最为普遍(22.1%),与 HCV 单感染、HBV/HCV 合并感染和 HCV/HIV 合并感染强烈相关,但与可见少数族裔的 HBV 单感染无关。极端物质贫困和社会贫困比注射毒品使用或有问题的酒精使用更为普遍,在可见少数族裔中。
具有不同族裔背景的 HBV 和/或 HCV 和/或 HIV 感染者的风险因素分布不同,可见少数族裔人群的物质使用患病率较低。这突出表明需要针对不同族裔群体制定有针对性的感染筛查方法。