African American race does not confer an increased risk of clinical events in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Yazdanfar M, Zepeda J, Dean R, Wu J, Levy C, Goldberg D, Lammert C, Prenner S, Reddy K, Pratt D, Forman L, Assis D, Lytvyak E, Montano-Loza A, Gordon S, Carey E, Ahn J, Schlansky B, Korzenik J, Karagozian R, Hameed B, Chandna S, Yu L, Bowlus C. African American race does not confer an increased risk of clinical events in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis. Hepatology Communications 2024, 8 PMID: 38285883, PMCID: PMC10830082, DOI: 10.1097/hc9.0000000000000366.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsBlack or African AmericanCholangitis, SclerosingDelayed DiagnosisEnd Stage Liver DiseaseHumansInflammatory Bowel DiseasesRetrospective StudiesSeverity of Illness IndexConceptsPrimary sclerosing cholangitisTransplant-free survivalInflammatory bowel diseaseHepatic decompensationNon-Hispanic whitesSclerosing cholangitisIncreased risk of clinical eventsNatural history of primary sclerosing cholangitisAssociated with transplant-free survivalHistory of primary sclerosing cholangitisAssociated with hepatic decompensationBowel diseaseProgression to hepatic decompensationRisk of clinical eventsDecompensation-free survivalMayo risk scoreAbnormal liver testsPerformance of prognostic modelsAfrican American raceRates of inflammatory bowel diseaseDeath/liver transplantationAA patientsLiver testsDiagnostic delayAA race