Incidence and outcomes of candida bloodstream infection in solid organ transplant recipients
Bitterman R, Kus JV, Verma G, Kopp A, Husain S, Kwong JC, Hosseini-Moghaddam SM. JAMA Netw Open. 2026; 9(3): e261467.
Background — Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is associated with reduced quality of life and health utility. It is unclear whether this is primarily due to HCV infection itself or commonly co-occurring patient characteristics such as low income and mental health issues. This study aims to estimate and separate the effects of HCV infection on health utility from the effects of clinical and sociodemographic factors using real-world population-level data.
Methods — We conducted a cross-sectional retrospective cohort study to estimate health utilities in people with and without HCV infection in Ontario, Canada, from 2000 to 2014 using linked survey data from the Canadian Community Health Survey and health administrative data. Utilities were derived from the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 instrument. We used propensity score matching and multivariable linear regression to examine the impact of HCV infection on utility scores while adjusting for clinical and sociodemographic factors.
Results — There were 7,102 individuals with hepatitis C status and health utility data available (506 HCV-positive, 6,596 HCV-negative). Factors associated with marginalization were more prevalent in the HCV-positive cohort (e.g., household income <$20,000: 36% versus 15%). Propensity score matching resulted in 454 matched pairs of HCV-positive and HCV-negative individuals. HCV-positive individuals had substantially lower unadjusted utilities than HCV-negative individuals did (mean ± standard error: 0.662 ± 0.016 versus 0.734 ± 0.015). The regression model showed that HCV positivity (coefficient: −0.066), age, comorbidity, mental health history, and household income had large impacts on health utility.
Conclusions — HCV infection is associated with low health utility even after controlling for clinical and sociodemographic variables. Individuals with HCV infection may benefit from additional social services and supports alongside antiviral therapy to improve their quality of life.
Saeed YA, Mitsakakis N, Feld JJ, Krahn MD, Kwong JC, Wong WWL. Med Decis Making. 2025; 272989X251319342. Epub 2025 Feb 22.
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