Falade-Nwulia Oluwaseun, Kelly Sharon M, Amanor-Boadu Sasraku, Nnodum Benedicta Nneoma, Lim Joseph K, Sulkowski Mark
Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
St Vincent's Medical Center, Bridgeport, Connecticut.
JAMA. 2023 Dec 12;330(22):2200-2208. doi: 10.1001/jama.2023.21981.
In the US, the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is 1.8% among people who are Black and 0.8% among people who are not Black. Mortality rates due to HCV are 5.01/100 000 among people who are Black and 2.98/100 000 among people who are White.
While people of all races and ethnicities experienced increased rates of incident HCV between 2015 and 2021, Black individuals experienced the largest percentage increase of 0.3 to 1.4/100 000 (367%) compared with 1.8 to 2.7/100 000 among American Indian/Alaska Native (50%), 0.3 to 0.9/100 000 among Hispanic (200%), and 0.9 to 1.6/100 000 among White (78%) populations. Among 47 687 persons diagnosed with HCV in 2019-2020, including 37 877 (79%) covered by Medicaid (7666 Black and 24 374 White individuals), 23.5% of Black people and 23.7% of White people with Medicaid insurance initiated HCV treatment. Strategies to increase HCV screening include electronic health record prompts for universal HCV screening, which increased screening tests from 2052/month to 4169/month in an outpatient setting. Awareness of HCV status can be increased through point-of-care testing in community-based settings, which was associated with increased likelihood of receiving HCV test results compared with referral for testing off-site (69% on-site vs 19% off-site, P < .001). Access to HCV care can be facilitated by patient navigation, in which an individual is assigned to work with a patient to help them access care and treatments; this was associated with greater likelihood of HCV care access (odds ratio, 3.7 [95% CI, 2.9-4.8]) and treatment initiation within 6 months (odds ratio, 3.2 [95% CI, 2.3-4.2]) in a public health system providing health care to individuals regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay compared with usual care. Eliminating Medicaid's HCV treatment restrictions, including removal of a requirement for advanced fibrosis or a specialist prescriber, was associated with increased treatment rates from 2.4 persons per month to 72.3 persons per month in a retrospective study of 10 336 adults with HCV with no significant difference by race (526/1388 [37.8%] for Black vs 2706/8277 [32.6%] for White patients; adjusted odds ratio, 1.02 [95% CI, 0.8-1.3]).
In the US, the prevalence of HCV is higher in people who are Black than in people who are not Black. Point-of-care HCV tests, patient navigation, electronic health record prompts, and unrestricted access to HCV treatment in community-based settings have potential to increase diagnosis and treatment of HCV and improve outcomes in people who are Black.
在美国,丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)在黑人中的患病率为1.8%,在非黑人中的患病率为0.8%。黑人中因HCV导致的死亡率为每10万人中有5.01人,白人中则为每10万人中有2.98人。
在2015年至2021年期间,所有种族和族裔的人群中HCV发病率均有所上升,其中黑人的发病率增长幅度最大,从每10万人中有0.3例增至1.4例(增长了367%),相比之下,美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民从每10万人中有1.8例增至2.7例(增长了50%),西班牙裔从每10万人中有0.3例增至0.9例(增长了200%),白人从每10万人中有0.9例增至1.6例(增长了78%)。在2019 - 2020年被诊断出患有HCV的47687人中,包括37877人(79%)由医疗补助计划覆盖(7666名黑人和24374名白人),有医疗补助保险的黑人中有23.5%、白人中有23.7%开始接受HCV治疗。增加HCV筛查的策略包括电子健康记录提示进行普遍的HCV筛查,这使得门诊环境中的筛查测试从每月2052次增加到每月4169次。通过社区环境中的即时检测可以提高对HCV状态的知晓率,与转介到外部进行检测相比,即时检测与获得HCV检测结果的可能性增加相关(现场检测为69%,外部检测为19%,P < 0.001)。患者导航可以促进获得HCV治疗,即安排一名工作人员与患者合作,帮助他们获得护理和治疗;在一个为无论保险状况或支付能力如何的个人提供医疗服务的公共卫生系统中,这与获得HCV治疗的可能性更大相关(优势比为3.7 [95%置信区间,2.9 - 4.8])以及在6个月内开始治疗的可能性更大相关(优势比为3.2 [95%置信区间,2.3 - 4.2]),与常规护理相比。在一项对10336名患有HCV的成年人的回顾性研究中,取消医疗补助计划对HCV治疗的限制,包括取消对晚期纤维化或专科医生开处方的要求,与治疗率从每月2.4人增加到每月72.3人相关,按种族无显著差异(黑人中为526/1388 [37.8%],白人患者中为2706/8277 [32.6%];调整后的优势比为1.02 [95%置信区间,0.8 - 1.3])。
在美国,黑人中HCV患病率高于非黑人。社区环境中的即时HCV检测、患者导航、电子健康记录提示以及不受限制地获得HCV治疗有可能增加黑人中HCV的诊断和治疗并改善其治疗结果。