Samuel ST, Martinez AD, Chen Y, Markatou M, Talal AH. Hepatitis C virus knowledge improves hepatitis C virus screening practices among primary care physicians. World J Hepatol 2018; 10(2): 319-328 [PMID: 29527267 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v10.i2.319]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Andrew H Talal, MD, Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 875 Ellicot Street, Suite 6090, Buffalo, NY 14203, United States. ahtalal@buffalo.edu
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Clinical Practice Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Table 2 Baseline characteristics of those individuals who responded to the survey (n = 91) from among the entire population invited to complete the survey (n = 163)
Table 3 Regression analysis for Box-Cox transformed knowledge of hepatitis C virus natural history
Variable
Level
Estimation
SD
P value
Intercept
-24.90
1.39
0.001
Knowledge of HCV treatment
5.93
0.10
0.001
Gender
Male
Reference level
Female
0.04
0.54
0.94
Primary practice location
Erie county medical center
Reference level
Buffalo general medical center
0.54
0.77
0.49
Others
-0.58
0.61
0.35
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yr
Yes
Reference level
No/not Sure
-0.54
0.65
0.41
Level of training
Resident PGY 1
Reference level
Resident PGY 2
-0.98
0.83
0.24
Resident PGY 3 and above
0.06
0.78
0.94
Awareness of age-based rule for screening
Yes
Reference level
No
-0.92
0.65
0.17
Implementation of age-based rule for screening
Yes
Reference level
No
-0.07
0.65
0.91
Table 4 Regression analysis for Box-Cox transformed knowledge of hepatitis C virus treatment
Variable
Level
Estimation
SD
P value
Intercept
11.98
2.12
0.001
Knowledge of HCV natural history
score < 6
Reference level
6 ≤ score < 15
-0.68
1.38
0.62
15 ≤ score
-2.42
1.64
0.14
Gender
Male
Reference level
Female
0.31
0.86
0.72
Primary practice location
Erie county medical center
Reference level
Buffalo general medical center
0.27
1.20
0.82
Others
-1.44
0.95
0.13
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yr
Yes
Reference level
No/not sure
0.88
1.02
0.39
Level of training
Resident PGY 1
Reference level
Resident PGY 2
1.51
1.30
0.25
Resident PGY 3 and above
1.76
1.25
0.16
Awareness of age-based rule for screening
Yes
Reference level
No
-2.21
1.00
0.03
Implementation of age-based rule for screening
Yes
Reference level
No
1.01
1.01
0.32
Table 5 Regression analysis for implementation of birth cohort screening recommendations
Variable
Level
Estimate
SD
P value
Intercept
-4.48
2.19
0.04
Knowledge of HCV treatment
-0.02
0.11
0.86
Knowledge of HCV natural history
0.27
0.08
0.002
Gender
Male
Reference level
Female
-0.94
0.68
0.17
Primary practice location
Erie county medical center
Reference level
Buffalo general medical center
0.77
0.81
0.34
Others
-0.36
0.72
0.62
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yr
Yes
Reference level
No/not sure
2.43
0.90
0.001
Level of training
Resident PGY1
Reference level
Resident PGY2
1.57
1.18
0.19
Resident PGY3 or above
1.62
1.15
0.16
Awareness of age-based rule for screening
Yes
Reference level
No
-2.32
0.88
0.01
Table 6 Primary care physician screening practices for hepatitis C virus infection
Question
Total
Option
Count
Percent
In the past 2 yr, have you ordered a test with an intention to screen for HCV?
85
Yes
75
88.2
No or Not Sure
10
11.8
What is the strongest indication to screen for HCV?
85
Risk factor identified on patient encounter
26
30.6
Patients born between 1945-1965
17
20.0
Abnormal liver enzymes
42
49.4
How have you screened for hepatitis C?
85
HCV antibody
47
55.3
Anti HCV antibody and HCV RNA PCR
11
12.9
Other combinations of Anti HCV antibody, HCV RNA, liver function tests, and "let the lab choose"
27
31.8
Do you follow professional society guidelines for HCV screening?
85
Yes
61
71.8
No
24
28.2
Table 7 Primary care physician practice patterns for hepatitis C virus screening
Question
Total
Option
Count
Percent
How often are HCV risk factors assessed during a clinic visit?
85
Always
14
16.5
Often
30
35.3
Sometimes
25
29.4
Rarely or never
16
18.8
Do you order an HCV screening test after identifying at least one risk factor?
85
Always
28
32.9
Often
30
35.3
Sometimes or rarely
27
31.8
Do you document HCV screening discussion/risk factor assessment in the health maintenance section of the patient’s chart?
85
Always or often
20
23.5
Sometimes
24
28.2
Rarely
29
34.1
Never
12
14.1
Table 8 Primary care physician perceptions toward screening for hepatitis C virus
Question
Total
Option
Count
Percent
Satisfied with the screening approach in the clinic
85
Yes
26
30.6
No
25
29.4
Not Sure
34
40.0
What is the most effective strategy in screening HCV in your clinic
85
Incorporate risk based screening
19
22.4
Incorporate birth cohort based screening
11
12.9
Incorporate both risk based and birth cohort screening
55
64.7
Most effect way to initiate screening during a clinic visit
85
Have patient fill out a screening questionnaire during wait period
47
55.3
Incorporate mandatory screening questions into EMR
19
22.4
Facilitate screening by use of posters in patient rooms
9
10.6
Printed patient handout about screening
10
11.7
Table 9 Primary care physician identified barriers to screening for hepatitis C virus (n = 85)
Option
Count
Percent
Inconsistency in offering HCV screening as a part of pre-set health maintenance protocol, time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors, unawareness of screening guidelines
14
16.5
Time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors
12
14.1
Unawareness of screening guidelines
12
14.1
Other combinations of inconsistency in offering HCV screening as a part of pre-set health maintenance protocol, time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors, taboo in asking confidential and personal information as outlined in the screening questionnaire, and unawareness of screening guidelines
47
55.3
Citation: Samuel ST, Martinez AD, Chen Y, Markatou M, Talal AH. Hepatitis C virus knowledge improves hepatitis C virus screening practices among primary care physicians. World J Hepatol 2018; 10(2): 319-328