Affiliation:
1. Oxford Vaccine Group, Department of Paediatrics University of Oxford University – Medical Sciences Oxford United Kingdom
2. Department of Paediatric Infectious Diseases Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust London United Kingdom
3. Department of Hepatology Imperial College London, Imperial College NIHR BRC London United Kingdom
Abstract
AimsThe World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 3.5% of the population live with hepatitis B virus (HBV); migrants to Europe are disproportionately affected. UK birth dose HBV vaccination is limited to infants born to those living with HBV (LWHBV). High‐risk infants (high maternal infectivity, low birthweight) also receive HBV immunoglobulin (HBIG). The Family Hepatitis Clinic follows infants and those LWHBV working towards WHO goals of combating viral hepatitis by 2030.MethodsA trust‐wide electronic note review of outcomes for infants born to those LWHBV (2016–2020).ResultsTwo hundred and eighty‐three infants, 134 (47%) females, born to those LWHBV were referred. Two hundred and thirty‐one (82%) attended follow‐up with a vertical transmission rate of 0%. Twenty (7%) individuals LWHBV received tenofovir disoproxil fumerate in pregnancy; median viral load (VL) at initiation 125 416 376 DNA IU/mL, one having birth VL. Twenty‐eight (10%) infants were stratified as high risk and all received HBIG and birth dose vaccination with 9 (32%) subsequently lost to follow‐up, compared to 48 (19%) low‐risk infants. 267/283 (94%) had birth dose vaccination documented and 206/283 (73%) received at least four vaccine doses. 215/283 (76%) infants had serology by 24 months; 17 (6%) with suboptimal vaccine responses: hepatitis B surface antibody <100 IU/mL. Serology before 18 months resulted in higher rates of maternal hepatitis B core antibody detection (15% vs. 3%).ConclusionPrevention of vertical transmission of HBV was universal in those attending, although high‐risk infants were more likely lost to follow up. HBV post‐vaccine serological protection was comparable with national data from 2021 (77% >4 doses, 77% HBsAb >100).
Reference24 articles.
1. World Health Organization (WHO).Hepatitis B Fact Sheet; 2021.
2. Global Health Sector Strategies on Respectively HIV Viral Hepatitis and Sexually Transmitted Infections for the Period 2022–2030. Geneva: World Health Organization; Licence: CC BY‐NC‐SA 3.0 IGO; 2022.
3. Guidelines for the Prevention Diagnosis Care and Treatment for People with Chronic Hepatitis B Infection. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2024. Available from:https://iris.who.int/bitstream/handle/10665/376353/9789240090903-eng.pdf?sequence=1.
4. WHO.Hepatitis B vaccines: WHO position paper; July 2017.
5. Barriers and facilitators to hepatitis B birth dose vaccination: Perspectives from healthcare providers and pregnant women accessing antenatal care in Nigeria