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1. Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention ProgramTX Department of Health Services Trudy Murphy, MD
Prevention Branch
Division of Viral Hepatitis
NCHHSTP/CDC
May 11, 2010
2. 05/11/2010
3. 05/11/2010 Rates of Symptomatic and Chronic HBV Infection by Age at Infection
4. What is immunoprophylaxis ? A form of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) using hepatitis B vaccine and high titer hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) to prevent perinatal and postnatal transmission of hepatitis B virus infection
Hepatitis B infection has a long incubation period* between exposure and disease; provides “window” for protecting against infection 05/11/2010
5. 05/11/2010 Risk of Perinatal HBV Transmission Varies by Degree of Virus Replication amongPregnant Women with Chronic Infection HBsAg = Hepatitis B surface antigen, marker of acute or chronic infection (infectious)
HBeAg =Hepatitis B e antigen, marker of high level active HBV replication (highly infectious)
6. 05/11/2010 Overview ACIP recommendations for immunoprophylaxis to prevent perinatal hepatitis B infection
Hepatitis B vaccines for infants
Safety
Efficacy with and without HBIG
Efficacy in preterm infants
Revaccinating non-responders
7.
05/11/2010
Case Management toPrevent Perinatal HBV Infection-1(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Identify all HBsAg-positive women and case manage their infants
Ensure their infants receive hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG = 12 hours of birth
8.
05/11/2010
Case Management toPrevent Perinatal HBV Infection-2(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Complete the recommended primary series of hepatitis B vaccine
BW > 2000 gm: 3-4 total doses of hepatitis B vaccine
BW = 2000 gm (preterm infants): 4 total doses hepatitis B vaccine
9. 05/11/2010 Case Management to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-3(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) 1- 2 months after last dose, obtain “post-vaccination serology” (# 1)
Wait at least 1 month after last dose: antigen from last dose of vaccine can give positive result (~18 days)
Obtain serology as soon as possible but at least 9 months after last dose: some infants will be susceptible and will benefit from revaccination
10. 05/11/2010 Case Management to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-4(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Post-vaccination serologic tests and their interpretation
Anti-HBs =10 mIU/ml = immune
HBsAg, if positive = HBV infected
Educate to prevent HBV transmission and complete contact management for members of the household (screening, vaccination, referring for evaluation, care)
11. 05/11/2010 Case Management to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-5(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Post-vaccination serology #1, Ctd
If HBsAg-negative and anti-HBs <10 mIU/ml, the infant is still susceptible
Revaccinate with 3 more doses hepatitis B vaccine (starting as soon as possible)
12. 05/11/2010 Case Management to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections- 6(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) 1-2 months after last revaccination dose, check another post-vaccination serology (# 2)
Immune - Anti-HBs =10 mIU/ml,
Infected – HBsAg-positive, or
Remains susceptible (non-responder) - anti-HBs <10 mIU/ml, HBsAg-negative
13. 05/11/2010 Case Management to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections- 7(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Complete education and contact management for members of the household (how to prevent transmission of HBV, screening, vaccination, referring for evaluation, care)
14.
05/11/2010
Immunoprophylaxis to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-8(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Identify infants born to woman with unknown HBsAg status at delivery
Ensure HBsAg test is ordered (ASAP) and case manage their infants
15. 05/11/2010 Immunoprophylaxis to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-9(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Hepatitis B vaccine = 12 hours of birth, and
BW = 2000 gm (preterm infants): HBIG = 12 hours unless mother’s HBsAg is now known to be negative
BW >2000 gm: HBIG = 7 days if mother’s HBsAg test positive
Case manage infant unless HBsAg-negative
16.
05/11/2010
Immunoprophylaxis to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infections-8(Post-exposure Prophylaxis-PEP) Infants born to woman with negative HBsAg at birthing hospital
Encourage hospitals to adopt universal “birth dose” policy
First dose hepatitis B vaccine before hospital discharge
Safety net HBsAg-positive contacts, errors
17. First Generation Hepatitis B Vaccines Plasma Derived Commercially available in 1982
Consisted of purified HBsAg (protein) from adults with chronic HBV infection; vaccine preparations treated to inactivate viruses
Highly effective (>90%)
Concerns about transmitting blood borne pathogens; discontinued 1990
18. Second Generation Hepatitis B Vaccines Recombinant DNA Introduced 1986
Genetic sequences of HBsAg protein (S gene) “copied” into yeast cells, expressed HBsAg protein, purified to remove yeast cell products
Adjuvant aluminum (hydroxide, phosphate)
Thimerosal preservative-free since March 2000
05/11/2010
19. Safety of Hepatitis B Vaccine >1 billion doses administered globally
No increase in temperature, no increase in fever/sepsis “work-ups” after a birth dose
Older infants, children
local pain at injection site, 3% - 29%
Low grade temperature (>37.7oC), 1% -6%
Serious adverse reactions extremely rare
05/11/2010
20. Hepatitis B Vaccine is Safe Does not cause
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
Arthritis
Guillain-Barré, brachial neuritis
Demyelinating diseases (optic neuritis, multiple sclerosis, transverse myelitis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, etc)
05/11/2010 One of the most studied vaccines and one of the safest. One of the most studied vaccines and one of the safest.
21. 2 Monovalent Recombinant Hepatitis B B Vaccines for Infants and Children MSD, Recombivax-HB®, 5 µg/0.5 ml dose (1986)
GSK, Engerix-B®,10 µg/0.5 ml dose (1989)
Both administered intramuscular route (IM)
Approved for all doses in hepatitis B vaccine series, including a dose at birth
Vaccines interchangeable in series
05/11/2010
22. 2 Combination Vaccines with Hepatitis B, for Infants and Children GSK, Pediarix® (DTaP-IPV-HepB), HepB 10 µg/0.5 ml dose (2002)
MSD, Comvax® (Hib-HepB), HepB 5 µg/0.5 ml dose (1996)
Approved for ages 6 weeks and older (NOT for birth dose; poor responses to DTaP, Hib)
Not interchangeable except with monovalent hepatitis B vaccines 05/11/2010
23. Hepatitis B Vaccination Schedulesfor Infants: 3 or 4 Doses First 2 doses provide early protection
Booster (last) dose given at a minimum age 24 weeks, adds long-term protection
Delayed doses do not need to be repeated but….
Risk of infection continues during delay
05/11/2010
24. Hepatitis B Vaccination3 Dose Schedules for Infants ACIP recommended schedules (if mother HBsAg-negative)
BW >2000 gm: age 0 (before hospital discharge), 1-2 & 6-18 months
BW <2000 gm (preterm): at hospital discharge or age 1 month, 2-4 & 6-18 months
Other schedules: age 0-2, 1-4, 6-18 months
EPI (WHO) schedule: ages 6, 10, 14 weeks (birth dose adopted in some countries)
05/11/2010
25. Hepatitis B Vaccination4 Dose Schedules for Infants Safe: no increase in reactions with 4 doses
Monovalent HepB vaccine at birth + 3 doses combination vaccine @ 2, 4, 6 months
BW <2000 gm (preterm) born to HBsAg-positive or HBsAg-unknown status women; birth dose given (“not counted” for series)
Chronological ages 0, 1, 2-3, 6-7 months
05/11/2010
26. Background for Recommended Case Management to Prevent Perinatal Hepatitis B Infection Hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG)
Hepatitis B vaccine with and without HBIG
Hepatitis B vaccine responses in preterm infants
Protection for non-responders by revaccination 05/11/2010
27. HBIG (alone) to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infection among Infants born to HBeAg-Positive Women, Taiwan, 1978-1982 05/11/2010
28. 05/11/2010
29. HBIG Prophylaxis for Infants Born to HBeAg-positive Women HBIG temporarily protected infants from hepatitis B virus infection
More infected infants developed active response (immunity) to HBV infection than chronic infection
Reduced chronic infections by ~50%-75% before age 15 months
New infections continued 05/11/2010
30. Hepatitis B Vaccine Trials Infants Born to HBsAg-Positive Women Vaccine efficacy defined as percent protected against chronic HBV infection in first year of life
Historical controls for rates chronic infection, ~70%, 90%
Rates of seroprotection (anti-HBsAg =10 mIU/ml) after 3 doses, measured at age 9-12 months; geometric mean titers anti-HBsAg
31. Hepatitis B Vaccine Trials Infants Born to HBeAg-Positive Women Plasma and recombinant vaccines
Dosages 2.5 - 20 µg HBsAg protein
Regimens
First dose <24 hours (3-5 days) of life
Many schedules: 0, 1, 6 months; 0,1,2,12 months; 0, 1.5, 9 months, etc)
With/without HBIG < 24 hours after birth
32. Recombinant Hepatitis B Vaccine Efficacy Infants Born to HBeAg-Positive Women 05/11/2010
33. Meta-analysis of 4 Trials (A, B, C, D)HBIG plus Hepatitis B Vaccine vs. Hepatitis B Vaccine Alone 05/11/2010
34. Rates Chronic HBV Infection among Infants Born to HBeAg Positive Women 05/11/2010
35. Vaccine Efficacy of Hepatitis B Vaccine among Highest Risk Infants (HBeAg-positive Mother) Vaccination series without HBIG prevents ~70% – 90% chronic HBV infections among infants at highest risk
Vaccination series with HBIG (both administered = 12 hours of birth) prevents 85% - 95% chronic HBV infections among infants at highest risk
2%-10% (~5%) chronic infections not prevented 05/11/2010
36. Seroprotection Anti-HBs =10 mIU/ml after vaccination correlates best with long-term protection, even as antibody wanes or no longer detected
Vaccine “responders” protected 20+ years; studies in Asia and Alaska (HBV endemic)
Breakthrough infections occur
No symptomatic infection
No chronic infection* 05/11/2010
37. Seroprotection Rates and Geometric Mean Titers (GMT) of Anti-HBsAg among InfantsBorn to HBeAg-Positive Women 05/11/2010
38. Seroprotection and Immunogenicity Immunogenicity and seroprotection rates improve with booster dose (# 3)
Higher geometric mean titer (GMT) extends period of measureable antibody
Seroprotection achieved among ~90+% infants after 3 doses hepatitis B vaccine
~5-10% infants non-responding; benefit from revaccination
05/11/2010
39. Infant Seroprotection (SP) Rates after Revaccination with Hepatitis B Vaccine(HBsAg-Positive or -Negative Women) 05/11/2010
40. Seroprotection Rates among Infant “Non-responders”after Revaccination Seroprotection rates achieved among 85%-95% of infant vaccine non-responders after revaccination
Improved response likely tied to older age
Use monovalent hepatitis B vaccine and routine dosage; effective, and avoids unnecessary doses of other components in combination vaccines
05/11/2010
41. Hepatitis B Vaccine for Low Birth Weight (Preterm) Infants No special adverse reactions (monitor for apnea as needed)
LBW infants (BW <2000 gm), especially ill preterm infants may have decreased immune response to hepatitis B vaccination starting at birth
For low risk LBW (preterm) infants, ACIP recommends hepatitis B vaccine starting at age 1 month or hospital discharge
05/11/2010
42. 05/11/2010
43. Hepatitis B Vaccine for High RiskLow Birth Weight (Preterm) Infants LBW infants born to HBsAg-positive or HBsAg-unknown status women should receive vaccine and HBIG = 12 hours of birth
Dose 1 (not counted); 2nd dose-1 given at age 1 month for infants born to HBsAg-positive women
High risk LBW infants non-responders respond to revaccination (similar to normal BW infants)
05/11/2010
44. Timing of Hepatitis B Vaccine Doses Makes a Difference HBIG >12 hr associated with higher rates perinatal HBV infection
Dose 2 delayed to age =10 weeks, associated with higher rate perinatal hepatitis B infection
Dose 3 (booster) at age =24 weeks improves long-term protection
Dose 1 before hospital discharge associated with higher vaccination coverage for other vaccines
05/11/2010
45. Immunoprophylaxis against Hepatitis B Virus Infection-Summary Hepatitis B vaccines are safe and very effective for infants and children
Timely completion of case management with hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG prevents 90% - 95% chronic HBV infections acquired in the first year of life
Revaccination effectively induces protection in 85% - 95% of non-responding infants
05/11/2010
46. Immunoprophylaxis to Prevent Perinatal Hepatitis B Infection (PEP)-Conclusion Preventing chronic HBV infection prevents development of debilitating liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular cancer, and reduces the reservoir of persons transmitting hepatitis B infection
Immunoprophylaxis for perinatal infections is life saving and cost-effective
05/11/2010
47. 05/11/2010 Thank youAcknowledgements CDC/NCIRD/ISD
Lisa Jacques-Carroll
CDC/NCHHSTP/DVH
Tanja Walker
Geoffrey Beckett
John Ward
Perinatal Hepatitis B
Coordinators