Characteristics of women presenting with hepatitis B at antenatal care services in London, 2008–2018

Author:

Wilson A12,Anderson C12,Mindlin M32,Sawyer C12,Verlander N Q45,Hiironen I12,Forde J12,Paranthaman K12,Chandra N L12

Affiliation:

1. Field Service South East and London , Health Protections Operations Group, , London, SW1P 3HX , UK

2. UK Health Security Agency , Health Protections Operations Group, , London, SW1P 3HX , UK

3. South London Health Protection Team , Health Protections Operations Group, , London, SW1P 3HX , UK

4. Statistics , Modelling and Economics Department, Data, Analytics and Surveillance Group, , London, SW1P 3HX , UK

5. UK Health Security Agency , Modelling and Economics Department, Data, Analytics and Surveillance Group, , London, SW1P 3HX , UK

Abstract

Abstract Background To support interventions to prevent mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis B and fill gaps in surveillance, the Enhanced Surveillance of Antenatal Hepatitis B (ESAHB) programme was implemented in London from 2008 to 2018 to collect demographic information on women who tested positive for hepatitis B during antenatal screening. We describe the epidemiology of hepatitis B in pregnancy, as reported to ESAHB. Methods The characteristics of pregnant women living with hepatitis B were described and rates were calculated by year, local authority and residence deprivation decile (1 being most deprived). Poisson regression tested the association between pregnant women living with hepatitis B and deprivation decile. Results Between 2008 and 2018, 8879 women living with hepatitis B in London (0.35 per 1000 women) reported 11 193 pregnancies. Annual hepatitis B rates remained stable, but there was strong evidence for an inverse association between rate and deprivation decile (P < 0.001). The majority of women in the cohort presented late to antenatal care, were born outside the UK in a hepatitis B endemic area or required an interpreter for consultations. Conclusions ESAHB provided important data to inform service quality improvements for women living with hepatitis B. This analysis highlights the link between deprivation and hepatitis B.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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