Reuters Health Information: Cirrhosis underdiagnosed and underdocumented in patients with hepatitis C
Cirrhosis underdiagnosed and underdocumented in patients with hepatitis C
Last Updated: 2015-08-12
By Sharon Nirenberg MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The prevalence of cirrhosis in
patients with chronic hepatitis C infection may be as much as
four times higher than previously estimated, according to a
recent cohort study.
A high percentage of hepatitis C patients with
biopsy-confirmed cirrhosis of the liver are not assigned the
appropriate International Classification of Diseases, Ninth
Revision (ICD-9) code and, therefore, in cohort studies the
prevalence of cirrhosis is significantly underestimated,
according to the authors of this new study online July 28 in the
American Journal of Gastroenterology.
"Establishing the diagnosis of cirrhosis can be very
complex and traditionally has required liver biopsy," lead
author of the new cohort study, Dr. Stuart Gordon, a
gastroenterologist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit,
Michigan, told Reuters Health by email. "However, a biomarker
index derived from blood tests (liver function tests and
platelet count) called FIB-4 (Firbrosis-4) may also provide good
evidence that underlying cirrhosis exists."
Dr. Gordon and colleagues studied patients enrolled in the
Chronic Hepatitis Cohort Study (CHeCS) who received health
services between 2006 and 2010 to determine if they had
cirrhosis based on liver biopsy reports, diagnosis and procedure
codes for cirrhosis or hepatic decompensation, or FIB-4 scores.
Of the 9,783 patients included in the cohort, 2,788 (28.5%)
were considered cirrhotic based on the study criteria. Only 661
(7%) patients had biopsy-confirmed cirrhosis, whereas FIB-4
scores identified 2,194 (22%) of the cirrhotic hepatitis C
patients. Additionally, of the patients with biopsy-confirmed
cirrhosis, only 356 (54%) had the appropriate ICD-9 code for
cirrhosis documented in their medical record.
Multivariable logistic modeling revealed that older age,
male gender, Asian race, Hispanic ethnicity, HCV genotype 3
infection, HIV coinfection, history of antiviral therapy, and
alcohol abuse, were independently associated with higher odds of
cirrhosis (p<0.05). On the contrary, private health insurance
coverage, HCV genotype 2, and black race were associated with
lower odds of cirrhosis.
"Our finding that 50% of patients with biopsy confirmed
cirrhosis lacked an associated ICD-9 code for cirrhosis suggests
that reliance upon ICD-9 coding data for analysis of current
electronic health records may be unreliable," Dr. Gordon told
Reuters Health.
The CDC Foundation, which receives grants from AbbVie,
Gilead Sciences, and Janssen Pharmaceuticals, funds CHeCS. Dr.
Gordon reported relationships with pharmaceutical companies
including AbbVie and Gilead.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1L4uF9c
Am J Gastroenterol 2015.
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