Guest guest Posted March 6, 2008 Report Share Posted March 6, 2008 Changing trends in hepatitis C-related mortality in the United States, 1995-2004 - attachment is detailed report with graphs/tables Hepatology March 2008 Advance Publication Wise 1 2 *§, Bialek 3, Lyn Finelli 3, Beth P. Bell 3, Sorvillo 1 2 1Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles 2Data Collection and Analysis Unit, Office of Health Assessment and Epidemiology, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA 3Division of Viral Hepatitis, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA Funded by: NIH/NIAID T32AI07481: Interdisciplinary Training Program in HIV/AIDS Epidemiology Note from Jules: the most dramatic mortality data is reflected in age groups 45-64 and among African-Americans and Hispanics. Look at he tables and graphs below and you'll dramatic impact on mortality by HCV in these groups. Clearly, the age impact is because people infected 20+ years ago are now dying since in monoinfection it takes on average 20 years to progress to cirrhosis. This progression is accelerated in HIV/HCV coinfection so you'll see in the article that the average age of death among coinfected is much lower, about 55 vs 47 yrs. The difference in mortality between African-Americans & Hispanics and whites is dramatic, which you'll see by looking at the graphs and tables below, with skyrocketing death rates among African- Americans and Latinos and somewhat of a leveling off among whites. Perhaps this reflects differences in acess to care and treatment and response rates to interferon-based therapy. “The most dramatic age-specific increases during the study period were observed among persons 45-54 years of age and persons 55-64 years of age, with rates increasing 376% from 1.76 to 8.01 per 100,000 and 188% from 2.22 to 6.05 per 100,000, respectively (Fig. 2, Table 1)…..Age-adjusted race/ethnicity-specific mortality rates also increased over the study period for all groups, with the most rapid increases among non-Hispanic blacks and Native Americans/Alaska Natives (Fig. 3, Table 1). Some of the most substantial mortality rate increases observed among specific subgroups during the study period were among non-Hispanic black males aged 55-64 (3.81 to 21.94 per 100,000) and non-Hispanic white males aged 45-54 (2.21 to 11.34 per 100,000).†Abstract The disease burden and mortality from hepatitis C are predicted to increase in the United States as the number of persons with long- standing chronic infection grows. We analyzed hepatitis C mortality rates derived from US Census and multiple-cause-of-death data for 1995-2004. Deaths were considered hepatitis C-related if: (1) hepatitis C was the underlying cause of death, (2) chronic liver disease was the underlying cause and hepatitis C was a contributing cause, or (3) human immunodeficiency virus was the underlying cause and chronic liver disease and hepatitis C were contributing causes. A total of 56,409 hepatitis C-related deaths were identified. Mortality rates increased 123% during the study period (1.09 per 100,000 persons to 2.44 per 100,000), but average annual increases were smaller during 2000-2004 than 1995-1999. After peaking in 2002 (2.57 per 100,000), overall rates declined slightly, but continued to increase among persons aged 55-64 years. Overall increases were greater among males (144%) than females (81%) and among non-Hispanic blacks (170%) and Native Americans (241%) compared to non-Hispanic whites (124%) and Hispanics (84%). The 7,427 hepatitis C deaths in 2004 (mean age: 55 years), corresponded to 148,611 years of potential life lost. The highest mortality rates in 2004 were observed among males, persons aged 45-54 and 55-64 years, Hispanics, non-Hispanic blacks, and non-Hispanic Native American/Alaska Natives. Conclusion: Overall, hepatitis C mortality has increased substantially since 1995. Despite small declines in recent years, rates have continued to increase among persons aged 55-64 years. Hepatitis C is an important cause of premature mortality. Article Text Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the most common blood-borne infection in the United States, with an estimated 1.3% of the general US population chronically infected.[1] About 10%-20% of chronically infected persons will develop liver cirrhosis and 1%-5% will develop hepatocellular carcinoma within 20-30 years of infection.[2] In a 2005 report, chronic HCV infection was shown to be the leading indication for liver transplantation in the United States.[3] Alcohol use, age at infection, duration of HCV infection, and male sex are all associated with progression of liver fibrosis, development of cirrhosis, and subsequent mortality among persons with chronic HCV infection.[4][5] Coinfection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is also an important prognostic factor influencing the course of HCV infection[6] and occurs commonly among persons infected with HCV due to injection drug use and other shared modes of transmission. Advances in antiretroviral therapy have extended the life of many HIV-infected persons, such that persons coinfected with HIV and HCV often live long enough to develop the sequelae of hepatitis C-related chronic liver disease.[7] Liver disease is now a leading cause of death among persons infected with HIV.[8] Several lines of evidence suggest that the disease burden and mortality from chronic HCV infection may increase in the coming years. Comparison of the age-specific prevalence of HCV infection during 1988-1994 and 1999-2002 showed that the peak prevalence of infection had shifted from persons 30-39 years of age to persons 40- 49 years of age, and that approximately two-thirds of infected participants in both surveys were born between 1945 and 1964.[1][9] These data, as well as results of mathematical models, suggest that the number of persons chronically infected for more than 20 years will continue to rise over the next decade.[10] Results of a mathematical modeling study predicted that the annual number of hepatitis C-related deaths would increase from an estimated 8,000 in 1991 to 18,000 annually between 2010 and 2019, based on past hepatitis C mortality, hepatocellular carcinoma incidence, liver transplantation, alcohol use, and mortality related to other causes. [11] Few studies provide data on the population impact of chronic HCV infection on mortality in the United States, largely due to the difficulty of correctly identifying the infection as a cause of death. Using US death record data, Vong and Bell found that 4,443 deaths were linked to hepatitis C in 1998, a 220% increase in age- adjusted mortality rates since 1993, although these numbers were considered to be an underestimate.[12] In addition, these data are now nearly a decade old, a time period in which large increases in hepatitis C-related mortality were expected. We examined United States multiple-cause-of-death (MCOD) data from 1995-2004 in order to provide more current, population-based estimates of trends and demographic differences in hepatitis C- related mortality utilizing a broader case definition than has been employed in previous population-based studies of hepatitis C-related mortality Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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