Saxena Varun, Wu Weilu, Balasubramanian Sreepriya, Mukhtar Nizar, Seo Suk I, Ready Joanna B, MacDonald Brock A, Schmittdiel Julie A
Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, California.
Gastroenterology and Transplant Hepatology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Gastro Hep Adv. 2024 May 15;3(6):871-879. doi: 10.1016/j.gastha.2024.04.015. eCollection 2024.
Studies show decreased rates of poor outcomes after hepatitis C virus (HCV) cure. However, there are no data comparing risk of poor outcomes to that of HCV never infected; results that could have implications for those who may not need ongoing specialty follow-up after cure.
Retrospective cohort study conducted among Kaiser Permanente Northern California adults ages 18 and up between 2002 and 2019. Three cohorts were identified: 1) chronic HCV, 2) HCV cured, and 3) every chronic HCV and HCV-cured individual was matched by age, sex and race-ethnicity to 3 HCV negative controls. Outcomes of interest were cirrhosis, decompensated cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and all-cause mortality. A low-risk group of HCV cured individuals without significant liver disease and/or concomitant liver disease cofactor(s) were identified.
We identified 21,184 chronic HCV, 11,950 HCV cure, and 99,402 control individuals. Five-year cumulative incidence of cirrhosis, decompensated cirrhosis, HCC and all-cause mortality was 10% vs 3.6% vs 0.8%, 12% vs 2.6% vs 0.6%, 3.9% vs 1.6% vs 0.07%, and 14% vs 2.8% vs 2.2% for chronic HCV, HCV cure, and control individuals, respectively (log-rank < .01 for all). Compared to controls, HCV cured low-risk individuals had numerically similar 5-year cumulative incidence of cirrhosis, decompensated cirrhosis, HCC and all-cause mortality (1.2% vs 0.8%, < .01; 0.9% vs 0.6%, < .01; 0.5% vs 0.1%, < .01; 1.7% vs 2.2%, < .01).
HCV cure provides significant health benefits but does not universally return risk of poor outcomes to that of the general population. A simple stratification at the time of HCV cure could identify low-risk individuals who can potentially be discharged from specialty clinics/HCC surveillance.
研究表明丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)治愈后不良结局发生率降低。然而,尚无数据将不良结局风险与从未感染HCV者的风险进行比较;该结果可能对治愈后可能无需持续专科随访的人群具有启示意义。
对2002年至2019年间北加利福尼亚凯撒医疗集团18岁及以上成年人进行回顾性队列研究。确定了三组队列:1)慢性HCV感染者;2)HCV治愈者;3)将每例慢性HCV感染者和HCV治愈者按年龄、性别和种族-族裔匹配3名HCV阴性对照。感兴趣的结局包括肝硬化、失代偿期肝硬化、肝细胞癌(HCC)和全因死亡率。确定了一组无显著肝脏疾病和/或无伴随肝脏疾病辅助因素的HCV治愈低风险个体。
我们确定了21184例慢性HCV感染者、11950例HCV治愈者和99402例对照个体。慢性HCV感染者、HCV治愈者和对照个体的肝硬化、失代偿期肝硬化、HCC和全因死亡率的5年累积发生率分别为10%对3.6%对0.8%、12%对2.6%对0.6%、3.9%对1.6%对0.07%和14%对2.8%对2.2%(所有比较的对数秩检验P < 0.01)。与对照相比,HCV治愈的低风险个体的肝硬化、失代偿期肝硬化、HCC和全因死亡率的5年累积发生率在数值上相似(1.2%对0.8%,P < 0.01;0.9%对0.6%,P < 0.01;0.5%对0.1%,P < 0.01;1.7%对2.2%,P < 0.01)。
HCV治愈带来显著的健康益处,但并非普遍使不良结局风险恢复至一般人群水平。在HCV治愈时进行简单分层可识别出可能可从专科诊所/HCC监测中出院的低风险个体。