医学
远程医疗
队列
回顾性队列研究
队列研究
肝细胞癌
家庭医学
内科学
急诊医学
远程医疗
医疗保健
经济增长
经济
作者
Samuel Hui,Nikhita Sane,Andrew Wang,Leo Q. Wan,Sally Bell,Suong Le,Anouk Dev
标识
DOI:10.1177/1357633x231166032
摘要
Real-world hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance uptake remains suboptimal, despite evidence that surveillance is associated with lower cancer-related mortality in patients with cirrhosis and chronic hepatitis B. We aimed to examine the impact of telehealth consultations on HCC surveillance rates within a specialist liver clinic.We conducted a retrospective observational study within an Australian outreach liver clinic within a culturally diverse community, comparing standard consultations before the COVID-19 pandemic to telehealth consultations during the pandemic. The primary outcome was surveillance uptake defined as the percentage of time up-to-date with surveillance (PTUDS) with the 6-month interval following each scan considered up-to-date.Over 18 months of follow-up for each cohort, the median PTUDS was 86.5% in the standard consultation cohort and 85.5% in the telehealth consultation cohort (p = 0.12). HCC diagnoses did not differ between groups and hospitalisation and mortality rates were low. Using multivariate regression, increasing age, the need for an interpreter and being born in South-East Asia independently predicted PTUDS in the standard consultation cohort, whereas being born in Australia or New Zealand was predictive of a lower PTUDS. Current alcohol use and distance from the clinic predicted a lower PTUDS in the telehealth consultation cohort. In both groups, missed clinic attendances were strongly predictive of a lower PTUDS.Telehealth hepatology consultations effectively coordinate HCC surveillance and are associated with similar outcomes to standard consultations. Its implementation should be widely considered given its advantages with regards to accessibility for patients.
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