jueves, 19 de mayo de 2011

Current Hepatitis B Screening Practices and Clinical Experience of Reactivation in Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy for Solid Tumors: A Nationwide Survey of Medical Oncologists

Copyright © 2011 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
Current Hepatitis B Screening Practices and Clinical Experience of Reactivation in Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy for Solid Tumors: A Nationwide Survey of Medical Oncologists
Fiona L. Day, FRACP⇓, Emma Link, DPhil, Karin Thursky, FRACP and Danny Rischin, FRACP+



Author
Affiliations

Department of Medical Oncology, Centre for Biostatistics and Clinical Trials, and Department of Infectious Diseases, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre; University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Corresponding author: Fiona L Day, FRACP, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Locked Bag 1, A'Beckett St, Melbourne, Victoria 8006, Australia; e-mail: fday@med.usyd.edu.au

Abstract
Purpose:Universal screening for chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) before chemotherapy has been recommended by the Centers for Disease Control. We sought to determine the practice of Australian oncologists with regard to HBV screening in patients with solid tumors (STs) and their clinical experience of HBV reactivation (HBVR).

Methods:A survey was sent to all consultant members of the Medical Oncology Group of Australia. One hundred eighty-eight responses (63% response rate) were received. We also reviewed the incidence of HBV in patients with STs screened at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre (Melbourne, Australia).

Results:Fifty-three percent of medical oncologists screen for HBV, but only 19% screen all patients. The most common reasons given for performing screening were anecdotal experience of HBVR (46%) and perceived sufficient evidence for screening of some patient subgroups (42%). Sixty-five percent of those who screened did so only in subgroups, usually selecting patients on the basis of ethnicity (82%). Oncologists who did not screen most commonly cited inadequate evidence for a benefit of screening (72%). Twenty-two percent of oncologists had witnessed one or more HBVR events, representing one event per 45 years of respondents' practice. HBVR events reported (n = 54) consisted of asymptomatic liver test abnormalities only (44%), symptomatic hepatitis (28%), decompensated liver failure (19%), and death (7%). In 206 patients with STs screened for HBV, 1.0% (n = 2) were HBV surface antigen positive, and 14.9% hepatitis B core antibody positive.

Conclusion:The majority of Australian medical oncologists have not adopted universal HBV screening before chemotherapy. Further evidence of the benefit and cost effectiveness of universal screening in patients with STs will be required to alter practice.

Accepted October 18, 2010.
Current Hepatitis B Screening Practices and Clinical Experience of Reactivation in Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy for Solid Tumors: A Nationwide Survey of Medical Oncologists

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