Impact of hepatitis B virus infection on women and children. |
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Authors: | C N Shapiro H S Margolis |
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Affiliation: | Hepatitis Branch, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia. |
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Abstract: | HBV infection acquired during infancy and early childhood has a high likelihood of progressing to chronic infection, which can lead to chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis, and primary hepatocellular carcinoma. In areas of the world where HBV infection occurs predominantly in infants and young children, routine infant immunization with hepatitis B vaccine is the most appropriate vaccination strategy. In the United States, the majority of HBV infections occur in adults with behaviors or occupations that put them at risk for HBV infection. Nevertheless, infection acquired during infancy and early childhood contributes significantly to the burden of chronic liver disease in the United States. Until recently, the vaccination strategy in the United States has included HBsAg screening of pregnant women and vaccination of infants born to infected women and vaccination of people in groups at high risk for HBV infection. Because of the difficulties in accessing and vaccinating persons from high-risk groups and the recent findings that HBV infection occurs more commonly among children in some groups in the United States than previously appreciated, the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee of the US Public Health Service and the American Academy of Pediatrics in 1991 endorsed a strategy of universal immunization of infants for hepatitis B. This strategy has the advantages of accessing infants in the United States through preexisting vaccine delivery systems and vaccinating individuals prior to their engaging in high-risk behavior. Continued screening of pregnant women for HBsAg is necessary to prevent perinatal HBV transmission and to identify for vaccination those household and sexual contacts of HBV carriers, a group that is also at high risk of HBV infection. |
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