Clinical impact of five large-scale screening projects for chronic hepatitis B in Chinese migrants in the Netherlands
Coenen, Sandra; van Meer, Suzanne; Vrolijk, Jan M; Richter, Clemens; van Erpecum, Karel J; Mostert, Marijke C; Veldhuijzen, Irene K; Reijnders, Jurriën G P; van Soest, Hanneke; Dirksen, Kees; Drenth, Joost P H; Koene, René P M; Bosschart, Maaike; Friederich, Pieter; Ter Borg, Martijn J; Daemen, Rick H P J; Arends, Joop E; Verhagen, Marc A M T; Schout, Christine; Spanier, B W Marcel
(2016) Liver International, volume 36, issue 10, pp. 1425 - 1432
(Article)
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: In low-endemic countries it is debated whether first-generation migrants should be screened for chronic hepatitis B infection. We describe the clinical impact of five large-scale Dutch screening projects for hepatitis B in first-generation Chinese migrants. METHODS: Between 2009 and 2013 five independent outreach screening projects for hepatitis
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B targeting first-generation Chinese migrants were conducted in five main Dutch regions. To explore the relevance of our screening we defined clinical impact as the presence of an indication for: (i) antiviral therapy, (ii) strict follow-up because of high hepatitis B DNA levels and/or (iii) surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma. RESULTS: In total, 4423 persons participated in the projects of whom 6.0% (n = 264) were HBsAg positive. One hundred and twenty-nine newly diagnosed HBsAg-positive patients were analysed in specialist care. Among these patients prevalence of cirrhosis was 6.9% and antiviral therapy for hepatitis B was started in 32 patients (25%). In patients without a treatment indication, strict follow-up because of high hepatitis B DNA levels and/or surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma was considered indicated in 64 patients (50%). CONCLUSIONS: In our screening project in first-generation Chinese migrants, antiviral treatment, strict follow-up because of high hepatitis B DNA levels and/or surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma were considered indicated in three of four analysed HBsAg-positive patients. These data show that detection of hepatitis B in Chinese migrants can have considerable impact on patient care.
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Keywords: Chinese migrants, clinical impact, hepatitis B, screening, secondary prevention
ISSN: 1478-3223
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Note: © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
(Peer reviewed)