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Elimination of Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis B in Africa: A Review of Available Tools and New Opportunities
Authors:Jodie Dionne-Odom  Basile Njei  Alan TN Tita
Institution:1. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama;2. Department of Medicine, Section of Digestive Disease, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut;3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Center for Women''s Reproductive Health, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama
Abstract:

Purpose

This review article focuses on preventing vertical transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) among pregnant women living in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where disease is endemic and the estimated maternal HBV seroprevalence is >8%. Available interventions that have been studied in low- and middle-income countries are compared in terms of efficacy and effectiveness in clinical practice. Global disease-elimination targets, barriers to HBV-prevention efforts, and critical research gaps are discussed.

Methods

A PubMed literature search in February 2018 identified relevant studies of interventions to reduce or prevent the transmission of HBV during pregnancy or in the peripartum period. Studies that focused on interventions that are currently available or could be made available in SSA were included. Trials conducted in SSA and other low-income countries were prioritized, although studies of interventions in middle- and high-income countries were included.

Findings

Among 127 studies and reports included in the review, 60 included data from SSA. The most cost-effective intervention to reduce HBV infection rates in SSA is timely birth-dose vaccination followed by completion of the 3-dose infant-vaccination series. The identification and treatment of pregnant women with elevated HBV viral load to further reduce the risk for vertical transmission in SSA show promise, but efficacy and tolerability trials in Africa are lacking.

Implications

Scale-up of currently available tools is required to reach HBV disease-elimination goals in SSA. Many countries in SSA are in the process of rolling out national birth-dose vaccination campaigns; this roll out provides an opportunity to evaluate and improve processes in order to expand coverage. Early antenatal care, promotion of facility deliveries, and increased awareness of HBV prevention are also key components of prevention success. Future studies in SSA should identity an HBV-prevention package that is effective, well tolerated, and feasible and can be administered in the antenatal clinic and tailored to vertical-transmission risk.
Keywords:hepatitis B antiviral therapy  hepatitis B in pregnancy  hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection  sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)  vertical HBV transmission
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