4.2 Article

Mortality and cause of death in persons with chronic hepatitis B virus infection versus healthy persons from the general population in Denmark

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS
Volume 29, Issue 9, Pages 727-736

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jvh.13713

Keywords

DANHEP; general population; hepatitis B; nationwide; Scandinavia

Funding

  1. Manufacturer Vilhelm Pedersen and Wife's Foundation
  2. Free research funds of University Hospital of Copenhagen, Amager and Hvidovre
  3. Scholarship in memory of Carpenter Jorgen Holm and wife Elisa B. Hansen [20006-1948]
  4. Aase and Ejnar Danielsens Foundation
  5. Scandinavian Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy Foundation [SLS-935536]

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This study found that individuals with chronic HBV infection have a higher all-cause mortality compared to those without chronic HBV infection, and this difference remained significant after adjusting for various confounding factors. Chronic HBV infection is associated with increased mortality due to liver disease and other diseases.
The study aimed to determine adjusted all-cause mortality and cause of death in persons with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection compared with age- and sex-matched persons from the general population. We used nationwide registers to identify persons aged >= 18 years with chronic HBV infection in 2002-2017 in Denmark and included 10 age- and sex-matched controls for each. Follow-up was from 6 months after diagnosis until death, emigration, or 31 December 2017. Mortality rate ratios (MRRs) adjusted for age, sex, employment, origin and comorbidity were calculated using Poisson regression. Unadjusted cause-specific mortality rate ratios with 95% confidence intervals were calculated assuming a Poisson distribution. A total of 6988 persons with chronic HBV infection and 69,847 controls were included. During a median follow-up of 7.7 years (range 0.0-15.5), 315 (5%) persons with-and 1525 (2%) without-chronic HBV infection died. The adjusted all-cause MRR was 1.5 (95% CI 1.2-2.0). Persons with chronic HBV infection had increased mortality due to liver disease including hepatocellular carcinoma (MRR 12.3 [8.6-17.7]), external causes (MRR 3.3 [2.5-4.7]), endocrine disease (MRR 3.2 [1.8-5.4]), genitourinary disease (MRR 3.2 [1.2-7.6]) and neoplasms (except hepatocellular carcinoma; MRR 1.6 [1.2-2.0]). In conclusion, this study showed an increased all-cause mortality in persons with chronic HBV infection in comparison with age- and sex-matched persons without chronic HBV infection which remained after adjustment for several confounding factors. Excess mortality was mainly associated with liver disease, but also external factors, endocrine disease, genitourinary disease and neoplasms (excluding hepatocellular carcinoma).

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