1. Significant Increase in Risk of Fibrosis or Cirrhosis at Time of HCV Diagnosis for Hispanics With Diabetes and Obesity Compared With Other Ethnic Groups.
- Author
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Turner BJ, Wang CP, Melhado TV, Bobadilla R, Jain MK, and Singal AG
- Subjects
- Body Mass Index, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hepatitis C, Chronic complications, Hepatitis C, Chronic ethnology, Humans, Incidence, Liver Cirrhosis diagnosis, Liver Cirrhosis etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity ethnology, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, United States epidemiology, Hepatitis C, Chronic diagnosis, Hispanic or Latino, Liver Cirrhosis ethnology, Liver Function Tests methods, Obesity complications, Risk Assessment methods
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Advanced liver disease, which includes fibrosis and cirrhosis, has been reported to be more prevalent in Hispanics patients at the time of diagnosis of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection than non-Hispanic black or non-Hispanic white patients. We performed a propensity score-matched analysis to determine whether metabolic risk factors contribute to this disparity., Methods: We collected data from persons with 748 HCV infection (22% Hispanic, 53% non-Hispanic black, and 26% non-Hispanic white; 23% with advanced liver disease), born from 1945 through 1965, diagnosed at 6 health care systems in Texas. Advanced liver disease was defined as a FIB-4 index score above 3.25. We examined the association between advanced liver disease and race or ethnicity, metabolic risk (based on diabetes mellitus and body mass index [BMI]) and heavy alcohol use in propensity score-matched analyses., Results: In propensity-score matched models, among those who were obese (BMI ≥30) with a diagnosis of diabetes, the adjusted odds ratio of advanced liver disease for Hispanics vs non-Hispanic black was 7.89 (95% CI, 3.66-17.01) and adjusted odds ratio = 12.49 (95% CI, 3.24-48.18) for Hispanic vs non-Hispanic white patients (both P < .001)., Conclusions: HCV-infected Hispanics with obesity and diabetes have a far higher risk for advanced liver disease than other racial or ethnic groups. These findings highlight the need for HCV treatment and management of probable concurrent fatty liver disease. Even after we accounted for metabolic risk factors, Hispanics were still at higher risk for advanced liver disease, indicating the potential involvement of other factors such as genetic variants., (Copyright © 2019 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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