학술논문

Twin epidemics of new and prevalent hepatitis C infections in Canada: BC Hepatitis Testers Cohort.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BMC Infectious Diseases. 7/19/2016, Vol. 16, p1-14. 14p. 7 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*HEPATITIS C virus
*EPIDEMIOLOGY
*EPIDEMICS
*HIV infections
*COHORT analysis
*COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism
*DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism
*HEPATITIS C diagnosis
*DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections
*PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis
*PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology
*SUBSTANCE abuse diagnosis
*HIV infection epidemiology
*ALCOHOLISM
*HEPATITIS B
*HEPATITIS C
*LONGITUDINAL method
*MENTAL illness
*SERODIAGNOSIS
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*DISEASE prevalence
*ODDS ratio
*DISEASE complications
*MIXED infections
*DIAGNOSIS
Language
ISSN
1471-2334
Abstract
Background: We characterized the twin epidemics of new and prevalent hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in British Columbia, Canada to inform prevention, care and treatment programs.Methods: The BC Hepatitis Testers Cohort (BC-HTC) includes individuals tested for HCV, HIV or reported as a case of HBV, HCV, HIV or active TB between 1990-2013 linked with data on their medical visits, hospitalizations, cancers, prescription drugs and mortality. Prevalent infection was defined as being anti-HCV positive at first test. Those with a negative test followed by a positive test were considered seroconverters or new infections.Results: Of 1,132,855 individuals tested for HCV, 64,634 (5.8 %) were positive and an additional 3092 cases tested positive elsewhere for a total of 67,726. Of 55,781 HCV positive individuals alive at the end of 2013, 7064 were seroconverters while 48,717 had prevalent infection at diagnosis. The HCV positivity rate (11.2 %) was highest in birth cohort 1945-1964 which declined over time. New infections were more likely to be male, 15-34 years of age (born 1965-1984), HIV- or HBV-coinfected, socioeconomically disadvantaged, have problematic drug and alcohol use and a mental health illness. The profile was similar for individuals with prevalent infection, except for lower odds of HBV-coinfection, major mental health diagnoses and birth cohort >1975.Conclusions: The HCV positivity rate is highest in birth cohort 1945-1964 which represents most prevalent infections. New infections occur in younger birth cohorts who are commonly coinfected with HIV and/or HBV, socioeconomically marginalized, and living with mental illness and addictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]