Electronic medical record alerts contribute to
dramatic rise in HepC screening
September 13, 2016--Baby boomers, adults born between 1945 and
1965, are five times more likely to have been exposed to the hepatitis C virus
(HCV).
As a result, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
and the U.S. Preventive Service Task Force recommend that all patients in that
age group get tested.
But the simple blood test, designed to detect and prevent
illness before the virus wreaks havoc, is infrequently performed on baby
boomers whose routine medical appointments are often crammed with other
preventive measures and tests -- as well as time spent addressing active
problems that require a doctor's immediate attention.
Investigators at the University of Michigan Health System
recently found an easy way to help primary care physicians ensure that an HCV
screening is part of the routine: Electronic medical record alerts.
The automated alert, programmed to appear if a patient was
within the at-risk age group, reminds doctors not only to issue the test but
also provide educational materials about the virus.
Implemented in fall 2015 in primary care clinics throughout
the U-M health system, the strategy contributed to a significant rise in
screenings -- an eightfold boost -- in the first six months alone.
"A large part of the success was figuring out how to take
the logistical work away, which involves more than looking at a patient's date
of birth," says Monica Konerman, M.D., M.Sc., a hepatologist at the
University of Michigan who treats patients facing the prospect of hepatitis
damaging their liver.
A population in need
It isn't entire clear why hepatitis C rates are higher in baby
boomers -- although many, according to the CDC, are believed to have become
infected during the 1970s and 80s when rates were highest (and before
screenings of donated blood and organs became available in 1992).
Hepatitis C, likewise, can be asymptomatic for decades. Many
patients could have been exposed to risk factors years ago but never sought
testing or treatment.
A universal one-time HCV screening based on age, then, can
bypass the discomfort of having to talk about potentially embarrassing topics
such as prior drug use or sharing needles.
It also helps democratize preventive care. Prior to launching
the alert, HCV screening was higher in men, Asian and African Americans, and in
patients with Medicaid insurance. Screening rates also varied greatly by clinic
site (ranging from 20 to 32 percent).
After the alert was adopted, however, screenings increased
equally among genders, races, insurance plans and UMHS clinic sites.
Why screening matters
The screening test for hepatitis C is the virus antibody. If
the hepatitis C antibody is detected, a confirmation test for the virus' RNA
(genetic material) is recommended to confirm chronic infection.
Of the 16,773 baby boomers targeted for screening via
electronic alert at UMHS, fewer than 1 percent tested positive for the
hepatitis C antibody.
Despite that low rate, the alert system nonetheless helped
identify people who would benefit from curative hepatitis C treatment, says
Konerman, who presented the findings in May at the Digestive Disease Week conference
in San Diego.
After all, a new era in hepatitis treatment began in 2013 with
the approval of interferon-free oral combination therapy that was demonstrated
in clinical trials studies led by the U-M to cure hepatitis C in 95 percent of
patients. If treated and the body responds, patients can get rid of the virus
before liver damage and liver failure occur.
Which is why the new alert technology is crucial for a
population that could benefit most from HCV screening.
"The availability of direct-acting antiviral agents has
been a game-changer," says Konerman.
"Previously, many providers thought screening had low
utility: (that) the treatment was terrible and didn't work well. Today, short
courses of all oral treatments are highly effective and can prevent progressive
liver disease."
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