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. 1997 Aug 23;315(7106):453–458. doi: 10.1136/bmj.315.7106.453

Management of chronic hepatitis C: clinical audit of biopsy based management algorithm.

G R Foster 1, R D Goldin 1, J Main 1, I Murray-Lyon 1, S Hargreaves 1, H C Thomas 1
PMCID: PMC2127336  PMID: 9284661

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the attendance, outcome, compliance with treatment, and response to interferon alfa in patients with chronic hepatitis C who attended during 1995 and were treated according to a biopsy based algorithm. DESIGN: Retrospective audit of all patients with chronic hepatitis C attending outpatient clinics over one year. SETTING: The liver unit at a London teaching hospital. SUBJECTS: 255 patients with chronic hepatitis C. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Patient survival, attendance, and compliance with diagnostic and therapeutic regimens. Response to interferon alfa treatment, based on loss of viraemia three months after cessation of treatment. RESULTS: A large proportion of patients (39%) with newly diagnosed chronic hepatitis C infection do not want to undergo further investigation. Of those patients who do attend for further treatment, a large proportion with severe hepatic fibrosis (42%) do not want to undergo currently available treatment. The response rate to interferon (21%) in treated patients was similar to that previously reported in a trial setting. There was no significant difference in response rates in patients with or without severe fibrosis not amounting to cirrhosis. In patients with cirrhosis there was a high incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (18%) over a follow up period of 20 months. CONCLUSION: Current strategies aimed at investigating and treating patients with chronic hepatitis C are not acceptable to a large proportion of patients. Many patients with cirrhosis related to hepatitis C infection develop hepatic neoplasms, and management strategies to deal with this problem are urgently required.

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