Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama.
Department of Medicine, Section of Digestive Disease, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Clin Ther. 2018 Aug;40(8):1255-1267. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2018.05.016. Epub 2018 Jul 5.
This review article focuses on preventing vertical transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) among pregnant women living in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where disease is endemic and the estimated maternal HBV seroprevalence is >8%. Available interventions that have been studied in low- and middle-income countries are compared in terms of efficacy and effectiveness in clinical practice. Global disease-elimination targets, barriers to HBV-prevention efforts, and critical research gaps are discussed.
A PubMed literature search in February 2018 identified relevant studies of interventions to reduce or prevent the transmission of HBV during pregnancy or in the peripartum period. Studies that focused on interventions that are currently available or could be made available in SSA were included. Trials conducted in SSA and other low-income countries were prioritized, although studies of interventions in middle- and high-income countries were included.
Among 127 studies and reports included in the review, 60 included data from SSA. The most cost-effective intervention to reduce HBV infection rates in SSA is timely birth-dose vaccination followed by completion of the 3-dose infant-vaccination series. The identification and treatment of pregnant women with elevated HBV viral load to further reduce the risk for vertical transmission in SSA show promise, but efficacy and tolerability trials in Africa are lacking.
Scale-up of currently available tools is required to reach HBV disease-elimination goals in SSA. Many countries in SSA are in the process of rolling out national birth-dose vaccination campaigns; this roll out provides an opportunity to evaluate and improve processes in order to expand coverage. Early antenatal care, promotion of facility deliveries, and increased awareness of HBV prevention are also key components of prevention success. Future studies in SSA should identity an HBV-prevention package that is effective, well tolerated, and feasible and can be administered in the antenatal clinic and tailored to vertical-transmission risk.
本文主要关注撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)地区孕妇乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)垂直传播的预防,该地区 HBV 流行,估计孕产妇 HBV 血清阳性率>8%。本文比较了在中低收入国家研究过的干预措施,以评估其在临床实践中的有效性和效果。本文还讨论了全球消除疾病目标、HBV 预防工作的障碍以及关键的研究空白。
2018 年 2 月,通过在 PubMed 上进行文献检索,确定了关于降低或预防妊娠期间或围产期 HBV 传播的干预措施的相关研究。本文纳入了目前可用于或可能用于 SSA 的干预措施的研究。本文优先考虑在 SSA 和其他低收入国家开展的试验,虽然也纳入了中高收入国家干预措施的研究。
在纳入的 127 项研究和报告中,有 60 项研究数据来自 SSA。在 SSA 降低 HBV 感染率最具成本效益的干预措施是及时的出生剂量疫苗接种,其次是完成婴儿 3 剂疫苗接种系列。在 SSA,识别和治疗 HBV 病毒载量升高的孕妇以进一步降低垂直传播风险显示出前景,但非洲缺乏疗效和耐受性试验。
需要扩大目前可用工具的使用范围,以实现 SSA 的 HBV 消除疾病目标。SSA 的许多国家正在开展国家出生剂量疫苗接种运动;这一推广提供了一个评估和改进流程的机会,以扩大覆盖范围。早期产前护理、促进医疗机构分娩以及提高对 HBV 预防的认识也是预防成功的关键组成部分。未来在 SSA 的研究应确定一个有效、耐受良好且可行的 HBV 预防方案,该方案可在产前诊所实施,并针对垂直传播风险进行调整。