首页> 中文期刊> 《世界胃肠病学杂志:英文版》 >Perinatal transmission in infants of mothers with chronic hepatitis B in California

Perinatal transmission in infants of mothers with chronic hepatitis B in California

         

摘要

AIM To evaluate maternal hepatitis B virus(HBV) DNA as risk for perinatal HBV infection among infants of HBVinfected women in California.METHODS Retrospective analysis among infants born to hepatitis B surface antigen(HBs Ag)-positive mothers who received post vaccination serologic testing(PVST) between 2005 and 2011 in California. Demographic information was collected from the California Department of Public Health Perinatal Hepatitis B Program databaseand matched to birth certificate records. HBV DNA level and hepatitis B e antigen(HBe Ag) status were obtained from three large commercial laboratories in California and provider records if available and matched to mother infant pairs. Univariate analysis compared infected and uninfected infants. Multivariate analysis was restricted to infected infants and controls with complete maternal HBV DNA results using a predefined high HBV DNA level of > 2 × 107 IU/ml,a 5:1 ratio of cases to controls and a two-sided confidence level of 95%.RESULTS A total of 17687 infants were born to HBs Ag positive mothers in California between Jan 1 2005 and Dec 31,2011. Among 11473 infants with PVST,only 125(1.1%) were found to be HBV infected. Among these infected infants,lapses in Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended post exposure prophylaxis(PEP) occurred in only 9 infants. However,PEP errors were not significantly different between infected and uninfected infants. Among the 347 uninfected and infected infants who had maternal HBe Ag and HBV DNA level,case-control analysis found HBe Ag positivity(70.4% vs 28.9%,OR = 46.76,95%CI: 6.05-361.32,P < 0.001) and a maternal HBV DNA level ≥ 2 × 107 IU/ml(92.6% vs 18.5%,OR = 54.5,95%CI: 12.22-247.55,P < 0.001) were associated with perinatal HBV infection. In multivariate logistic regression,maternal HBV DNA level ≥ 2 × 107 IU/ml was the only significant independent predictor of perinatal HBV infection. CONCLUSION In California,transmission is low and most infected infants receive appropriate PEP and vaccination. Maternal HBV DNA ≥ 2 × 107 IU/ml is associated with high risk of perinatal infection.

著录项

相似文献

  • 中文文献
  • 外文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号