Abstract
BackgroundChronic hepatitis C virus infection is prevalent and often causes hepatic fibrosis, which can progress to cirrhosis and cause liver cancer or liver failure. Study of fibrosis progression often relies on imputing the time of infection, often as the reported age of first injection drug use. We sought to examine the accuracy of such imputation and implications for modeling factors that influence progression rates.MethodsWe analyzed cross-sectional data on hepatitis C antibody status and reported risk factor histories from two large studies, the Women's Interagency HIV Study and the Urban Health Study, using modern survival analysis methods for current status data to model past infection risk year by year. We compared fitted distributions of past infection risk to reported age of first injection drug use.ResultsAlthough injection drug use appeared to be a very strong risk factor, models for both studies showed that many subjects had considerable probability of having been infected substantially before or after their reported age of first injection drug use. Persons reporting younger age of first injection drug use were more likely to have been infected after, and persons reporting older age of first injection drug use were more likely to have been infected before.ConclusionIn cross-sectional studies of fibrosis progression where date of HCV infection is estimated from risk factor histories, modern methods such as multiple imputation should be used to account for the substantial uncertainty about when infection occurred. The models presented here can provide the inputs needed by such methods. Using reported age of first injection drug use as the time of infection in studies of fibrosis progression is likely to produce a spuriously strong association of younger age of infection with slower rate of progression.
Highlights
Chronic hepatitis C virus infection is prevalent and often causes hepatic fibrosis, which can progress to cirrhosis and cause liver cancer or liver failure
Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) enrolled 3766 women, injection drug use (IDU) history was only assessed in enough detail for the present study 8 years after initial enrollment
This shows increasing prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) seropositivity even at long durations, suggesting continuing risk among those who avoid infection early on. This suggests that not everyone who is infected with HCV due to IDU is infected in the first year, as is commonly assumed
Summary
Chronic hepatitis C virus infection is prevalent and often causes hepatic fibrosis, which can progress to cirrhosis and cause liver cancer or liver failure. In contrast to the usual statistical modeling in risk factor studies, which utilizes logistic regression with potential risk factors modeled as fixed covariates, we use survival analysis methods with timevarying covariates This is possible even though every observation is either left-censored (infection occurred at some unknown time in the past) or right censored (infection has not yet occurred). An advantage of this approach is that it permits reconstruction of past risk year by year, which facilitates assessment of possible biases or inaccuracies in the usual imputation strategy, along with the implications for modeling of factors that influence fibrosis progression
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