Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Inappropriate hepatitis A, B tests may be widespread in hospitals


 

AT THE LIVER MEETING 2015

References

SAN FRANCISCO – A majority of inpatients with suspected acute hepatitis A and acute hepatitis B underwent inappropriate ordering of lab tests for those conditions, a study in one U.S. medical center showed.

“We looked at all the patients that came into our hospital who had acute hepatitis A or acute hepatitis B panels ordered,” explained Dr. Kamran Hussaini of Saint Louis (Mo.) University.

How frequently were those labs ordered inappropriately? “What we found was that the majority of patients who had acute hepatitis A and acute hepatitis B labs had ALT [alanine aminotransferase] and AST [aspartate aminotransferase] levels that were below 100,” Dr. Hussaini said.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Dr. Hussaini discussed the study’s findings, what may be driving physicians to order inappropriate and costly hepatitis testing, and which strategies could reduce those trends.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

ILC: New single daily pill eradicates hepatitis C
HCV Hub
ILC: Unrecognized hepatitis C linked with advanced hepatic fibrosis
HCV Hub
ILC: Statins linked to better outcomes in hepatitis C cirrhosis
HCV Hub
ILC: Europe issues hepatitis C treatment priority list
HCV Hub
ILC: Direct antivirals safely clear HCV despite ESRD
HCV Hub
DDW: Biologic agents improve Crohn’s disease picture
HCV Hub
DDW: Recurrent C. difficile infections take heavy toll on IBD patients
HCV Hub
DDW: Single daily pill knocks out HCV in prior nonresponders
HCV Hub
Gastrointestinal and liver diseases remain substantial public health burden
HCV Hub
Lusutrombopag is effective for thrombocytopenia in liver disease
HCV Hub