初级保健对高危人群低屏障丙型肝炎治疗的效果

IF 0.9 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Scarlett Austin, Kristi Seemiller, Brittany Nolton, Emily Hobart, Bruce Ling, Jonathan Ghobrial, Thomas Robertson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

丙型肝炎(HCV)可在初级保健机构进行治疗;然而,大多数患者被转介给专科医生。边缘化人群可能因耻辱或药物使用而拒绝接受治疗。我们的目标是在这些高危患者中治疗HCV,并通过在初级保健诊所利用多学科治疗团队来防止从诊断到治疗时间的延迟和持续病毒学反应(SVR)。评估的结果包括在3个月时达到SVR,从诊断到开始治疗的时间,以及既往亚专科转诊队列和最初接受初级保健治疗的队列之间比较的肝纤维化阶段。在32名开始治疗的患者中,29名(90.6%)完成了治疗方案,27名(84.3%)记录了SVR。与先前转诊的患者(中位时间为954天)相比,在初级保健机构接受治疗的患者从病毒载量检测到开始治疗的中位时间(161天)显着缩短。综合纤维化评分显示转介到专科医生的患者得分明显较高。我们证明HCV治疗在初级保健中成功实现SVR,并且病毒载量和治疗开始之间的中位天数减少,纤维化评分降低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Outcomes of Low Barrier Hepatitis C Treatment in High Risk Populations From Primary Care.

Hepatitis C (HCV) can be treated in the primary care setting; however, most patients are referred to subspecialists. Marginalized populations may be refused treatment due to stigma or substance use. We aimed to treat HCV in these high-risk patients, and prevent a delay in time from diagnosis to the time of treatment and sustained virologic response (SVR), by utilizing a multidisciplinary treatment team in a primary care clinic. Outcomes assessed included achieving SVR at 3 months, time from diagnosis to treatment initiation, and liver fibrosis stage compared between cohorts with previous subspecialty referral and those treated initially from primary care. Among the 32 patients who initiated treatment, 29 (90.6%) completed the regimen and 27 (84.3%) had documented SVR. Patients treated in a primary care setting without prior referral had a significantly shorter median time from viral load testing to treatment initiation (161 days), compared to those who were previously referred (median time of 954 days). Aggregated fibrosis scores suggest those referred to subspecialists had significantly higher scores. We demonstrate successful HCV treatment in primary care achieving SVR, and a decrease in the median days between viral load and treatment initiation, with lower fibrosis scores.

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来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
106
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: JCHIMP provides: up-to-date information in the field of Internal Medicine to community hospital medical professionals a platform for clinical faculty, residents, and medical students to publish research relevant to community hospital programs. Manuscripts that explore aspects of medicine at community hospitals welcome, including but not limited to: the best practices of community academic programs community hospital-based research opinion and insight from community hospital leadership and faculty the scholarly work of residents and medical students affiliated with community hospitals.
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