From the Journals

Racial disparities not found in chronic hepatitis B treatment initiation


 

FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN

Finding the disparities

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that Black people are 3.9 times more likely to have CHB and 2.5 times more likely to die from it than White people, notes H. Nina Kim, MD, with the department of medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, in an accompanying invited commentary.

“The fact that we have not observed racial disparities in treatment initiation does not mean none exist; it means we have to look harder to find them,” she writes.

“We need to examine whether our guidelines for HBV treatment are so complex that it becomes the purview of specialists, thereby restricting access and deepening inequities,” Dr. Kim adds. “We should look closely at retention in care, the step that precedes treatment, and stratify this outcome by race and ethnicity.”

Primary care physicians in some regions might find it difficult to manage patients who have hepatitis B because they see so few of them, Dr. Lok noted.

Dr. Khalili has received grants and consulting fees from Gilead Sciences Inc and grants from Intercept Pharmaceuticals outside the submitted work. Dr. Lok has received grants from Target and consultant fees from Abbott, Ambys, Arbutus, Chroma, Clear B, Enanta, Enochian, GNI, GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, and Virion outside the submitted work. Coauthors have received grants, consulting fees, or personal fees from Bayer, Boston Scientific, Exact Sciences, Fujifilm Medical Sciences, Gilead Sciences, Glycotest, Redhill Biopharma, Target RWE, MedEd Design, Pontifax, Global Life, the Lynx Group, AstraZeneca, Eisai, Novartis Venture Fund, Grail, QED Therapeutics, Genentech, Hepion Pharmaceuticals, Roche, Abbott, AbbVie, and Pfizer. Dr. Kim has received grants from Gilead Sciences (paid to her institution) outside the submitted work.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Old-school printer helps scientists quickly spot bacteria in blood
MDedge Internal Medicine
Cases of potentially deadly fungus jump 200%: CDC
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors – a new weapon against respiratory viruses?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Celebrity death finally solved – with locks of hair
MDedge Internal Medicine
Expert shares her tips for diagnosing, treating onychomycosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Spotting STIs: Vaginal swabs work best
MDedge Internal Medicine
High-dose prophylactic anticoagulation benefits patients with COVID-19 pneumonia
MDedge Internal Medicine
Deadly bacteria in recalled eye drops can spread person-to-person
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lack of food for thought: Starve a bacterium, feed an infection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Antimicrobial resistance requires a manifold response
MDedge Internal Medicine