HEPLA: A multicenter study on demographic and disease characteristics of patients with hepatitis C in Latin America
Author
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Viola, Luis
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Marciano, Sebastián
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Colombato, Luis
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Coelho, Henrique
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Cheinquer, Hugo
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Bugarin, Gabriela
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Tatsch, Fernando
Author
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Carvalho-Filho, Roberto J.
Author
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Roblero Cum, Juan
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Varon, Adriana
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Holguín, Jaime
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Torres Ibarra, María R.
Author
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Pérez Ríos, Alma M.
Admission date
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2020-07-03T23:46:28Z
Available date
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2020-07-03T23:46:28Z
Publication date
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2020
Cita de ítem
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Annals of Hepatology 19 (2020) 161–165
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1016/j.aohep.2019.09.006
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/175788
Abstract
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Introduction and objectives: Currently, there are limited data on the epidemiology and disease characteristics of patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in Latin America. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate demographic and disease characteristics of patients with CHC in Latin America.
Patients and methods: HEPLA was a non-interventional, multicenter study of the epidemiology and disease characteristics of patients with CHC in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico.
Results: Of the 817 included patients, the median age was 58 years, 53.9% were female, and 39.3% had cirrhosis. Overall, 41.2% were treatment naive, 49.8% were treatment experienced, and 8.9% were currently undergoing treatment. In patients with available data, genotype 1b accounted for 41.6% of infections, followed by genotype 1a (29.9%) and genotype 3 (11.3%). Probable mode of infection was transfusion in 46.8% of patients. Liver-related comorbidities were present in 26.4% of patients and non-liver-related comorbidities were present in 72.3%. Most patients (71.8%) received concomitant medications, with proton-pump inhibitors (20.8%) being the most commonly reported.
Conclusions: At the time the HEPLA study was carried out, the data from this cross-section of patients in Latin America showed that the CHC population has variation in disease and viral characteristics, with a minority of patients receiving treatment and many patients having advanced disease. Increased awareness and access to treatment are necessary in Latin America in order to meet the goal of hepatitis C virus elimination by 2030.