Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom

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Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom. / Dyson, Jessica K; Wong, Lin Lee; Bigirumurame, Theophile; Hirschfield, Gideon M; Kendrick, Stuart; Oo, Ye H; Lohse, Ansgar W; Heneghan, Michael A; Jones, David E J; UK-AIH Consortium.

in: ALIMENT PHARM THER, Jahrgang 48, Nr. 9, 11.2018, S. 951-960.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Dyson, JK, Wong, LL, Bigirumurame, T, Hirschfield, GM, Kendrick, S, Oo, YH, Lohse, AW, Heneghan, MA, Jones, DEJ & UK-AIH Consortium 2018, 'Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom', ALIMENT PHARM THER, Jg. 48, Nr. 9, S. 951-960. https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.14968

APA

Dyson, J. K., Wong, L. L., Bigirumurame, T., Hirschfield, G. M., Kendrick, S., Oo, Y. H., Lohse, A. W., Heneghan, M. A., Jones, D. E. J., & UK-AIH Consortium (2018). Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom. ALIMENT PHARM THER, 48(9), 951-960. https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.14968

Vancouver

Dyson JK, Wong LL, Bigirumurame T, Hirschfield GM, Kendrick S, Oo YH et al. Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom. ALIMENT PHARM THER. 2018 Nov;48(9):951-960. https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.14968

Bibtex

@article{eb4155571e8e43a395ea775f2023f231,
title = "Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Treatment paradigms in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) have remained largely unchanged for decades. Studies report ≤20% of patients have sub-optimal treatment response with most requiring long-term therapy.AIM: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis (UK-AIH) study was established to evaluate current treatment practice and outcomes, determine the unmet needs of patients, and develop and implement improved treatment approaches.METHODS: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis study is a cross-sectional cohort study examining secondary care management of prevalent adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis. Enrolment began in March 2014. Prevalent cases were defined as having been diagnosed and treated for >1 year. Demographic data, biochemistry, treatment history and response, and care location were collected.RESULTS: In total, 1249 patients were recruited; 635 were cared for in transplant units and 614 in non-transplant centres (81% female with median age at diagnosis 50 years). Overall, 29 treatment regimens were reported and biochemical remission rate was 59%. Remission rates were significantly higher in transplant compared to non-transplant centres (62 vs 55%, P = 0.028). 55% have ongoing corticosteroid exposure; 9% are receiving prednisolone monotherapy. Those aged ≤20 years at diagnosis were more likely to develop cirrhosis and place of care was associated with an aggressive disease phenotype.CONCLUSIONS: There are significant discrepancies in the care received by patients with autoimmune hepatitis in the UK. A high proportion remains on corticosteroids and there is significant treatment variability. Patients receiving care in transplant centres were more likely to achieve and maintain remission. Overall poor remission rates suggest that there are significant unmet therapeutic needs for patients with autoimmune hepatitis.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Dyson, {Jessica K} and Wong, {Lin Lee} and Theophile Bigirumurame and Hirschfield, {Gideon M} and Stuart Kendrick and Oo, {Ye H} and Lohse, {Ansgar W} and Heneghan, {Michael A} and Jones, {David E J} and {UK-AIH Consortium}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2018",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1111/apt.14968",
language = "English",
volume = "48",
pages = "951--960",
journal = "ALIMENT PHARM THER",
issn = "0269-2813",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Inequity of care provision and outcome disparity in autoimmune hepatitis in the United Kingdom

AU - Dyson, Jessica K

AU - Wong, Lin Lee

AU - Bigirumurame, Theophile

AU - Hirschfield, Gideon M

AU - Kendrick, Stuart

AU - Oo, Ye H

AU - Lohse, Ansgar W

AU - Heneghan, Michael A

AU - Jones, David E J

AU - UK-AIH Consortium

N1 - © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2018/11

Y1 - 2018/11

N2 - BACKGROUND: Treatment paradigms in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) have remained largely unchanged for decades. Studies report ≤20% of patients have sub-optimal treatment response with most requiring long-term therapy.AIM: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis (UK-AIH) study was established to evaluate current treatment practice and outcomes, determine the unmet needs of patients, and develop and implement improved treatment approaches.METHODS: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis study is a cross-sectional cohort study examining secondary care management of prevalent adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis. Enrolment began in March 2014. Prevalent cases were defined as having been diagnosed and treated for >1 year. Demographic data, biochemistry, treatment history and response, and care location were collected.RESULTS: In total, 1249 patients were recruited; 635 were cared for in transplant units and 614 in non-transplant centres (81% female with median age at diagnosis 50 years). Overall, 29 treatment regimens were reported and biochemical remission rate was 59%. Remission rates were significantly higher in transplant compared to non-transplant centres (62 vs 55%, P = 0.028). 55% have ongoing corticosteroid exposure; 9% are receiving prednisolone monotherapy. Those aged ≤20 years at diagnosis were more likely to develop cirrhosis and place of care was associated with an aggressive disease phenotype.CONCLUSIONS: There are significant discrepancies in the care received by patients with autoimmune hepatitis in the UK. A high proportion remains on corticosteroids and there is significant treatment variability. Patients receiving care in transplant centres were more likely to achieve and maintain remission. Overall poor remission rates suggest that there are significant unmet therapeutic needs for patients with autoimmune hepatitis.

AB - BACKGROUND: Treatment paradigms in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) have remained largely unchanged for decades. Studies report ≤20% of patients have sub-optimal treatment response with most requiring long-term therapy.AIM: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis (UK-AIH) study was established to evaluate current treatment practice and outcomes, determine the unmet needs of patients, and develop and implement improved treatment approaches.METHODS: The United Kingdom Autoimmune Hepatitis study is a cross-sectional cohort study examining secondary care management of prevalent adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis. Enrolment began in March 2014. Prevalent cases were defined as having been diagnosed and treated for >1 year. Demographic data, biochemistry, treatment history and response, and care location were collected.RESULTS: In total, 1249 patients were recruited; 635 were cared for in transplant units and 614 in non-transplant centres (81% female with median age at diagnosis 50 years). Overall, 29 treatment regimens were reported and biochemical remission rate was 59%. Remission rates were significantly higher in transplant compared to non-transplant centres (62 vs 55%, P = 0.028). 55% have ongoing corticosteroid exposure; 9% are receiving prednisolone monotherapy. Those aged ≤20 years at diagnosis were more likely to develop cirrhosis and place of care was associated with an aggressive disease phenotype.CONCLUSIONS: There are significant discrepancies in the care received by patients with autoimmune hepatitis in the UK. A high proportion remains on corticosteroids and there is significant treatment variability. Patients receiving care in transplant centres were more likely to achieve and maintain remission. Overall poor remission rates suggest that there are significant unmet therapeutic needs for patients with autoimmune hepatitis.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1111/apt.14968

DO - 10.1111/apt.14968

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30226274

VL - 48

SP - 951

EP - 960

JO - ALIMENT PHARM THER

JF - ALIMENT PHARM THER

SN - 0269-2813

IS - 9

ER -