Title of article :
Are there ethnicity-based differences in the evaluation of individuals with abnormal liver biochemistries?
Author/Authors :
Naga Chalasani، نويسنده , , Chandan Saha، نويسنده , , Evgenia Teal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
5
From page :
123
To page :
127
Abstract :
Background/Aims Recent studies suggested NAFLD is less infrequent in African Americans (AA) than in Caucasians but it is unclear if this difference is biological or due to under-recognition/under-referral. This study examined if there is an ethnicity-based difference in obtaining liver biochemistries or evaluating abnormal liver biochemistries by primary care physicians. Methods This study consisted of 45,016 AA and 49,660 Caucasians seen at our primary care clinics over a 3-year period. From these two groups, we identified patients with elevated aminotransferases (AA: 3676, Caucasians: 4644) and elevated bilirubin (AA: 1295, Caucasians: 1199) based on predefined criteria. Subsequently, we assessed the proportion of patients in each group who had liver-specific evaluation (viral serologies, abdominal imaging or GI clinic visit). Results Among patients with elevated aminotransferases, compared to Caucasians, AA did not have lower testing for viral hepatitis (26% vs. 25%), imaging (16% vs. 13%) or GI clinic visits (17% vs. 17%). Similarly, we did not observe clinically significant difference in the evaluation of elevated bilirubin between AA and Caucasians (viral serologies: 22% vs. 22%; imaging: 25% vs. 27%; GI clinic: 15% vs. 21%). Conclusions Under-recognition and under-referral are not likely to explain the reported ethnic differences in the prevalence of NAFLD.
Keywords :
Aminotransferase , Charlson index , fatty liver
Journal title :
Journal of Hepatology
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Journal of Hepatology
Record number :
581405
Link To Document :
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