Patient Care

Strategies to Improve Hepatocellular Carcinoma Surveillance in Veterans With Hepatitis B Infection

Attitudes of patients as well as infectious disease, gastroenterology, and primary care providers need to be addressed to improve surveillance rates for high-risk patients with chronic hepatitis B infections.

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The incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is rising in the U.S., with an estimated 8,500 to 11,500 new cases occurring annually, representing the ninth leading cause of U.S. cancer deaths. 1,2 An important risk factor for HCC is infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV), an oncogenic virus. Patients with HBV infection have an associated 5- to 15-fold increased risk of HCC, compared with that of the general population. 3 Despite clinician awareness of major risk factors for HCC, the disease is often diagnosed at an advanced stage when patients have developed a high tumor burden or metastatic disease and have few treatment options. 4

It is well recognized that U.S. veterans are disproportionately affected by hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, which also places them at risk for HCC. In contrast, the prevalence of HBV infection, which has shared routes of transmission with HCV, and its associated complications among U.S. veterans has not been fully characterized. A recent national study showed that 1% of > 2 million veterans tested for HBV infection had a positive hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), indicating active HBV infection. 5

Routine surveillance for HCC among high-risk patients, such as those with chronic HBV infection, can lead to HCC detection at earlier stages, allowing curative treatments to be pursued more successfully. 6-9 Furthermore, HBV infection can promote development of HCC even in the absence of cirrhosis. 10,11 Therefore, according to the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) guidelines, HCC screening with abdominal ultrasound is recommended every 6 to 12 months for patients with chronic HBV infection who have additional risk factors for HCC, including those aged ≥ 40 years, and patients with cirrhosis or elevated alanine aminotransferase levels (ALTs). 10

Overall adherence to HCC screening recommendations in the U.S. has been low, although rates have varied depending on the underlying risk factor for HCC, provider type, patient characteristics, and practice setting. 12-20 In a 2012 systematic review, the pooled HCC surveillance rate was 18.4%, but nonwhite race, low socioeconomic status, and follow-up in primary care (rather than in subspecialty clinics) were all associated with lower surveillance rates. 18 Low rates of HCC screening also have been seen among veterans with cirrhosis and chronic HCV infection, and a national survey of VHA providers suggested that provider- and facility-specific factors likely contribute to variation in HCC surveillance rates. 14

There are few data on HCC incidence and surveillance practices specifically among veterans with chronic HBV infection. Furthermore, the reasons for low HCC surveillance rates or potential interventions to improve adherence have not been previously explored, although recent research using national VA data showed that HCC surveillance rates did not differ significantly between patients with HBV infection and patients with HCV infection. 14

Considering that veterans may be at increased risk for chronic HBV infection and subsequently for HCC and that early HCC detection can improve survival, there is a need to assess adherence to HCC screening in VA settings and to identify modifiable factors associated with the failure to pursue HCC surveillance. Understanding barriers to HCC surveillance at the patient, provider, and facility level can enable VA health care providers (HCPs) to develop strategies to improve HCC screening rates in the veteran population.

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