Background: In order for hepatitis C patients to receive antiviral treatment, they must reach medical care.
Aim: To assess the proportion of patients reaching medical care after hepatitis C diagnosis in a general population (1 006 171 inhabitants) in France.
Methods: Between 1994 and 1999, 1508 cases were diagnosed, of which 1251 were eligible for the study.
Results: Two-hundred and two patients did not have any medical care; among them, 55.4% had normal alanine transferase, 58.4% had risk factors related to lifestyle and 22.8% were alcoholics. Amongst the 1049 other patients, 41.6% had a liver biopsy, 25.0% were treated. Treatment was more often carried out in males than in females (OR: 1.59; P = 0.001), and in patients under 65 than in older patients (OR: 2.22; P < 0.008). Among non-treatment reasons, alcoholism (P = 0.001), drug-addiction (P = 0.04) and escaping monitoring (P = 0.04) were more frequent in males than in females, whereas normal alanine transferase was more frequent in females than in males (P = 0.004). Amongst 278 patients with a Metavir score >A1F1, 71 (25.5%) did not undergo treatment.
Conclusion: In a general population, one patient in six did not receive on-going health care; a quarter of patients with a Metavir score >A1F1 did not receive any treatment. These results showed insufficient clinical management, which could compromise the effectiveness of treatment in general population.