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Effects of hepatitis B immunization on prevention of mother-to-infant transmission of hepatitis B virus and on the immune response of infants towards hepatitis B vaccine
Authors:Lei Zhang  Xi-en Gui  Caroline Teter  Hairong Zhong  Zhiyong Pang  Lixiong Ding  Fengliang Li  Yun Zhou  Ling Zhang
Institution:1. Department of Infectious Diseases, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, No.169, Donghu Road, Wuchang District, 430071 Wuhan, Hubei Province, China;2. Department of Infection Control, Qingdao Municipal Hospital, Qingdao, China;3. Department of Medicine, Erie Family Health Center, Chicago, USA;4. Mother and Child Hospital, Wuxue , Huanggang, China;5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Chongyang County, Xianning, China;6. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Xiaonan District, Xiaogan, China;g Mother and Child Hospital, Tongcheng County, Xianning, China;h Mother and Child Hospital, Dangyang, Yichang, China;i Mother and Child Hospital, Huanggang, China
Abstract:

Background

Combined immunization with hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) plus hepatitis B vaccine (HB vaccine) can effectively prevent perinatal transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV). With the universal administration of HB vaccine, anti-HBs conferred by HB vaccine can be found increasingly in pregnant women, and maternal anti-HBs can be passed through the placenta. This study was designed to evaluate the effect of hepatitis B immunization on preventing mother-to-infant transmission of HBV and on the immune response of infants towards HB vaccine.

Method

From 2008 to 2013, a prospective study was conducted in 15 centers in China. HBsAg-positive pregnant women and their infants aged 8–12 months who completed immunoprophylaxis were enrolled in the study and tested for HBV markers (HBsAg, anti-HBs, HBeAg, anti-HBe and anti-HBc). Antepartum administration of HBIG to HBsAg-positive women was based on individual preference. HBsAg-negative pregnant women and their infants of 7–24 months old who received HB vaccines series were enrolled and tests of their HBV markers were performed.

Results

1202 HBsAg-positive mothers and their infants aged 8–12 months were studied and 40 infants were found to be HBsAg positive with the immunoprophylaxis failure rate of 3.3%. Infants with immunoprophylaxis failure were all born to HBeAg-positive mothers of HBV-DNA ≥ 6 log10 copies/ml. Among infants of HBeAg-positive mothers, immunoprophylaxis failure rate in vaccine plus HBIG group, 7.9% (29/367), was significantly lower than the vaccine-only group, 16.9% (11/65), p = 0.021; there was no significant difference in the immunoprophylaxis failure rate whether or not antepartum HBIG was given to the pregnant woman, 10.3% (10/97) vs 9.0% (30/335), p = 0.685. Anti-HBs positive rate was 56.3% (3883/6899) among HBsAg-negative pregnant women and anti-HBs positive rate was 94.2% in cord blood of anti-HBs-positive mothers. After completing the HB vaccine series, anti-HBs positive rate among infants with maternal anti-HBs titers of <10 IU/L, 10–500 IU/L and ≥500 IU/L was 90.3% (168/186), 90.5% (219/242) and 80.2% (89/111) respectively, p = 0.011. Median titers of anti-HBs (IU/L) among infants in the three groups was 344.2, 231.9 and 161.1 respectively, p = 0.020.

Conclusions

HBIG plus HB vaccine can effectively prevent mother-to-infant transmission of HBV, but no HBV breakthrough infection was observed in infants born to HBeAg-negative mothers who received HB vaccine with or without HBIG after birth. Antepartum injection of HBIG has no effect on preventing HBV mother-to-infant transmission. High maternal titer of anti-HBs can transplacentally impair immune response of infants towards HB vaccine.
Keywords:HBV  HBIG  HB vaccine  Mother-to-infant transmission  Anti-HBs  Immune response
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