Geoepidemiology, clinical manifestations and outcome of primary biliary cholangitis in Greece

2017 
Abstract Background & aims Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) is a disease with rising prevalence and considerable geographical variation. To describe the prevalence, spatial and time distribution, baseline characteristics, response to treatment, outcome and the validity of GLOBE score in a large cohort of Greek PBC patients as an independent validation of this score has not been done so far. Methods The last 16 years, 482 PBC patients (86.5% females) were evaluated and analysed retrospectively, using a prospectively collected database. Special attention was paid to the assessment of treatment response according to GLOBE score. Results Age at initial evaluation was 56.3 ± 13.7 years. Among 432 Thessaly residents, prevalence was 582/million (non-homogeneous distribution). Nineteen districts showed a prevalence > 800/million. Symptomatic disease onset could be identified in 91 patients, with a significant peak during spring ( P  = 0.03). At diagnosis, 43.6% were asymptomatic and 16.2% cirrhotic. Male sex ( P  = 0.02), older age ( P P P  0.30 had significantly worse prognosis ( P Conclusions There is increased PBC prevalence in Thessaly with remarkable geographic clustering and seasonal variability. PBC is diagnosed at early stages although males had a more advanced disease. GLOBE score applies perfectly in Greek patients and this will likely help detecting patients that may benefit from new therapies.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    51
    References
    25
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []