Hepatitis C virus testing in a clinical HIV cohort in Ontario, Canada, 2000 to 2015
Background HIV‐positive individuals may acquire HCV via injection drug use (IDU) and condomless anal sex. HIV care provides opportunities for HCV testing and cure with direct‐acting antiviral agents (DAAs). Methods We analyzed data from the Ontario HIV Treatment Network Cohort Study. Among those not...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Health science reports 2021-09, Vol.4 (3), p.e358-n/a |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
HIV‐positive individuals may acquire HCV via injection drug use (IDU) and condomless anal sex. HIV care provides opportunities for HCV testing and cure with direct‐acting antiviral agents (DAAs).
Methods
We analyzed data from the Ontario HIV Treatment Network Cohort Study. Among those not HCV‐positive or diagnosed previously (n = 4586), we used Cox regression to test the rates of ever HCV testing (serological or RNA) in HIV care by DAA era (pre‐DAA: 2000‐2010; after DAA: 2011‐2015) and compared the proportion diagnosed with HCV. We identified correlates of annual proportions of serological testing using Poisson generalized estimating equations.
Results
After DAA vs pre‐DAA, the hazard rate ratio (95% CI) of ever HCV testing was 1.70 (1.59, 1.81). The proportion (95% CI) tested annually increased from 9.2% (8.0%, 10.7%) in 2000 to 39.1% (37.1%, 41.1%) in 2015 (P |
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ISSN: | 2398-8835 2398-8835 |
DOI: | 10.1002/hsr2.358 |