Abstract

Chronic HCV infection, a highly endemic disease in Egypt, is usually asymptomatic for decades after infection. Prediction questionnaire tool was proofed to be a valuable, feasible and efficient instrument for the screening of several diseases. We previously developed an Egyptian HCV risk screening tool (EGCRISC). This study aims to validate/modify EGCRISC. A cross-sectional study testing 4579 individuals by EGCRISC as well as ELISA/PCR was performed. The sample was a stratified cluster sampling from urban and rural areas in Upper and Lower Egypt using a proportional allocation technique. The degree of agreement and positive and negative posttest probabilities were calculated. ROC curve was done and the cutoff points were customized for best performance. The total score was further classified into three levels according to the risk load. The mean age of the participants was 41.1±12.2 in whom HCV prevalence was 8.6%. EGCRISC, particularly after modifying the cutoff points, has a good discriminating ability. The degree of agreement was at least 68.1% and the positive posttest probability ranged from 5% to 37.2% whereas the negative posttest probability was in the range 1% to 17%. We conclude that EGCRISC is a valid tool that can potentially screen for HCV infection risk in Egypt and could diminish the demand for mass serologic screening in those apparently at minimal risk. Extensive use of electronic and self- or interviewer-administered risk-based screening strategy may simplify and promote overall screening and detection of HCV dissimilar communities.

Highlights

  • Detection of chronic HCV infection and eventually treatment and lifestyle/ behavioral changes cannot only prevent sequelae such as cirrhosis, end-stage liver disease or HCC, and interrupts infection transmission [1].HCV is arguably the major public health challenge facing Egypt today

  • The risk assessment tool abstracted from the first phase [13] was developed through a multivariate model of independent predictors of HCV seropositivity, that included the significant factors detected in the bivariate analysis among two age strata (45 years) for each gender

  • As for males above 45, we respected the use of the best cutoff point of phase I model (8 vs 7) since it had higher reported sensitivity (70% vs 66%) and specificity (80% vs 58%)

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Summary

Introduction

Detection of chronic HCV infection and eventually treatment and lifestyle/ behavioral changes cannot only prevent sequelae such as cirrhosis, end-stage liver disease or HCC, and interrupts infection transmission [1]. HCV is arguably the major public health challenge facing Egypt today. The virus shows evidence of continuous transmission in health care settings as well as within households [2]. Due to the absence of vaccines and drugs for post-exposure prophylaxis, precautionary measures preventing future spread is the cornerstone for prevention [3].

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