| Literature DB >> 23894479 |
Yusuke Shimakawa1, Hong-Jing Yan, Naho Tsuchiya, Christian Bottomley, Andrew J Hall.
Abstract
Age at infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a known risk factor for chronic HBV infection. However, in addition, there is some evidence that early age at infection further increases the risk of primary liver cancer beyond its association with increased risk of chronic infection. This systematic review of observational studies assesses the association between age at initiation of chronic HBV infection and liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and their predictors including indicators of ongoing viral replication and hepatic damage. The review includes birth order and maternal HBV serology as proxies for age at infection. Electronic searches in two English-language (Medline and Embase, until Jan 2012) and two Chinese-language (CNKI and SinoMed, until Sep 2012) databases without language restriction and manual search through reference lists identified 7,077 papers, of which 19 studies of 21 outcomes (8 primary liver cancer, 1 liver cirrhosis, 10 viral replication and 2 liver inflammation) are included. One study directly examined the age at infection in a longitudinal cohort, 12 assessed maternal sero-status and 6 investigated birth order. The direction of associations in all studies was in accordance with our hypothesis that earlier age at infection is associated with worse outcomes in addition to its effect of increasing the probability of chronic HBV infection. This has implications for the control of hepatitis B.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23894479 PMCID: PMC3716646 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow diagram of study selection.
Abbreviations: CHB, chronic hepatitis B; HBV, hepatitis B virus.
Study of the Association Between Time of HBV Infection and the Risk of HBeAg Persistence in a Systematic Review, up to 2012.
| First Author, Year (Reference No.) | Region | Study Design | Serological Course | No. of Subjects | Median Age at1st HBsAg-positiveResult | MedianDurationof Follow-up | Median No. of SerologicalTests |
| McMahon, 2001 | Alaska, USA | Cohortstudy | Remained HBeAg-positive throughout the follow-up period | 9 | 4.6 years old | 11.1 years | 12 |
| Lost HBeAg during the course without reversion | 47 | 7.8 years old | 16.6 years | 17 | |||
| Lost HBeAg during the course with reversion to positive HBeAg | 11 | 12.5 years old | 14.8 years | 20 |
Studies Assessing the Effect of Maternal HBV Sero-status on HCC, Liver Cirrhosis and Peak ALT Levels in a Systematic Review, up to 2012.
| Crude | Adjusted | ||||||||||
| First Author, Year, Region (Reference No.) | Study Design | Age Range, Years | Type of Maternal HBV Sero-marker | Frequency in Casesor Exposed Group | Frequency in Controls or Non-exposed Group | OR orRR | 95% CI |
| OR or RR | 95% CI |
|
| 1. HCC | |||||||||||
| Beasley, 1982, Taiwan | CC | Children | HBsAg | 12/14 (86%) | 17/49 (35%) | 11.3 | 1.9, 67.8 | 0.0008 | N/R | ||
| Chang, 1989, Taiwan | CC | 3–16 | HBsAg at entry | 29/31 (94%) | 22/44 (50%) | 14.5 | 2.5, 84.0 | 0.0001 | N/R | ||
| 2. Cirrhosis | |||||||||||
| Hsu, 1988, Taiwan | CS | Children | HBsAg | 6/23 (23%) | 0/21 (0%) | 16.0 | 0.8, 303.6 | 0.02 | N/R | ||
| 3. Peak ALT level | |||||||||||
| Kojima, 1985, Japan | Co | 2–12 | HBsAg | 3/9 (33%) | 22/28 (79%) | 0.42 | 0.17, 1.09 | 0.04 | N/R | ||
| Tseng, 2011, Taiwan | Co | 0–16 | HBsAg at entry | 63/137 (46%) | 29/48 (60%) | 0.76 | 0.57, 1.02 | 0.09 | N/R | ||
| HBeAg at entry | 33/80 (41%) | 59/105 (56%) | 0.73 | 0.54, 1.00 | 0.04 | N/R | |||||
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; CC, case-control study; CI, confidence interval; Co, cohort study; CS, cross-sectional study; HBeAg, hepatitis B e antigen; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HR, hazard ratio; N/R, not reported; OR, odds ratio; RR, risk ratio.
When age range was not available, study was categorized as children (<20 years old), adults (≥20 years old) or both children and adults.
Prevalence of exposure in cases presented in case-control design and prevalence of outcome in exposed group presented in cross-sectional and cohort study.
Prevalence of exposure in controls presented in case-control design and prevalence of outcome in non-exposed group presented in cross-sectional and cohort study.
Odds ratios for case-control or cross-sectional studies and risk ratios for cohort studies are presented.
Communication with the author confirmed that all the HCC cases were positive for HBsAg.
When the measurement of maternal sero-status was performed is not known.
Matched design without matched analysis.
As a contingency table contains a zero cell, 0.5 was added to each cell.
Although the 95% CI does not exceed the unity, P value is <0.05 due to the small sample size.
Studies Assessing the Effect of Maternal HBV Sero-status on Persistence/Prevalence of HBeAg in a Systematic Review, up to 2012.
| Crude | Adjusted | ||||||||||
| First Author, Year, Region (Reference No.) | Study Design | Age Range, Years | Type of MaternalHBV Sero-marker | Frequency in Exposed Group | Frequency in Non-exposed Group | OR orRR | 95% CI |
| OR orHR | 95% CI |
|
| 1. Persistence of HBeAg | |||||||||||
| Kojima, 1985, Japan | Co | 2–12 | HBsAg at entry | 7/9 (78%) | 9/28 (32%) | 2.4 | 1.3, 4.6 | 0.02 | N/R | ||
| Kojima, 1985, Japan | Co | 19–48 | HBsAg at entry | 4/4 (100%) | 2/9 (22%) | 4.5 | 1.3, 15.3 | 0.02 | N/R | ||
| Chang, 1989, Taiwan | Co | 0–15 | HBsAg | 121/142 (85%) | 52/75 (69%) | 1.2 | 1.0, 1.5 | 0.006 | N/R | ||
| Tseng, 2011, Taiwan | Co | 0–16 | HBsAg at entry | 56/137 (41%) | 8/48 (17%) | 2.5 | 1.3, 4.8 | 0.002 | 1.2 | 0.8, 1.8 | 0.5 |
| HBeAg at entry | 41/80 (51%) | 23/105 (22%) | 2.3 | 1.5, 3.6 | <0.0001 | 1.8 | 1.1, 2.8 | 0.01 | |||
| 2. Prevalence of HBeAg | |||||||||||
| Wheeley, 1989, UK | CS | 0–16 | Prenatal HBeAg | 32/42 (76%) | 0/1 (0%) | 9.3 | 0.4, 245.6 | 0.1 | N/R | ||
| Habu, 1991, Japan | CS | Children & adults | HBsAg at entry | 71/101 (70%) | 96/152 (63%) | 1.4 | 0.8, 2.4 | 0.2 | 1.6 | 0.9, 2.9 | 0.1 |
| Tai, 1999, Taiwan | CS | >15 | HBsAg at entry | 67/221 (30%) | 35/131 (27%) | 1.2 | 0.7, 1.9 | 0.5 | N/R | ||
| Hopkirk, 2000, New Zealand | CS | Children & adults | HBsAg | 160/281 (57%) | 214/530 (40%) | 2.0 | 1.5, 2.6 | <0.0001 | 1.8 | 1.3, 2.4 | 0.0005 |
| Soderstrom, 2002, Sweden | CS | 2–18 | HBeAg | 15/16 (94%) | 11/17 (65%) | 8.2 | 0.8, 400.8 | 0.09 | N/R | ||
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; CC, case-control study; CI, confidence interval; Co, cohort study; CS, cross-sectional study; HBeAg, hepatitis B e antigen; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HR, hazard ratio; N/R, not reported; OR, odds ratio; RR, risk ratio.
When age range was not available, study was categorized as children (<20 years old), adults (≥20 years old) or both children and adults.
Odds ratios for case-control or cross-sectional studies and risk ratios for cohort studies are presented.
Except for the study of Tseng et al. [28] which presented hazard ratios, odds ratios are presented.
When the measurement of maternal sero-status was performed is not known.
Multivariable model included maternal HBsAg, maternal HBeAg, peak ALT and HBV genotype.
As a contingency table contains a zero cell, 0.5 was added to each cell.
Adjusted for age.
The author provided the raw data to compute odds ratio.
Studies of Birth Order With Control Group in a Systematic Review, up to 2012.
| Crude | Adjusted | ||||||||||||
| First Author, Year (Reference No.) | Region | Study Design | Age Range, Years | Outcome | BirthOrder | No. ofCases (%) | No. ofControls (%) | OR | 95% CI |
| OR | 95% CI |
|
|
| Greece | CC | Adults | HCC | 1st | 17 (20%) | 9 (27%) | 1.0 | Reference | 0.04 | 1.0 | Reference | 0.02 |
| 2nd | 11 (13%) | 11 (33%) | 0.5 | 0.2, 1.7 | 0.9 | 0.2, 4.2 | |||||||
| 3rd | 17 (20%) | 3 (9%) | 3.0 | 0.7, 13.8 | 7.8 | 1.4, 42.4 | |||||||
| 4th | 15 (18%) | 4 (12%) | 2.0 | 0.5, 8.0 | 4.0 | 0.8, 20.7 | |||||||
| ≥5th | 25 (29%) | 6 (18%) | 2.2 | 0.6, 7.6 | 3.8 | 0.9, 16.5 | |||||||
|
| Greece | CC | Adults | HCC | 1st | 42 (20%) | 13 (43%) | 1.0 | Reference | 0.0008 | 1st 1.0 | Reference | N/R |
| 2nd | 59 (28%) | 9 (30%) | 2.0 | 0.8, 5.2 | 2nd 2.0 | 0.8, 5.3 | |||||||
| 3rd | 49 (24%) | 7 (23%) | 2.2 | 0.8, 6.0 | ≥3rd 4.1 | 1.3, 12.7 | |||||||
| ≥4th | 58 (28%) | 1 (4%) | 18.0 | 2.0, 163.4 | |||||||||
|
| Taiwan | CS | Adults | HBeAg | 1st | 29 (29%) | 65 (23%) | 1.00 | Reference | 0.09 | N/R | ||
| 2nd | 29 (29%) | 68 (25%) | 0.96 | 0.51, 1.77 | |||||||||
| 3rd | 24 (24%) | 78 (28%) | 0.69 | 0.36, 1.30 | |||||||||
| 4th | 11 (11%) | 40 (14%) | 0.62 | 0.28, 1.38 | |||||||||
| ≥5th | 7 (7%) | 27 (10%) | 0.58 | 0.23, 1.50 | |||||||||
Abbreviations: CC, case-control study; CI, confidence interval; CS, cross-sectional study; HBeAg, hepatitis B e antigen; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; N/R, not reported; OR, odds ratio.
When age range was not available, study was categorized as children (<20 years old), adults (≥20 years old) or both children and adults.
Adjusted for age, sex, smoking and anti-HCV.
Adjusted for age, sex, smoking, alcohol, schooling, anti-HCV and sibship size.
Stratification by relationship with index case (i.e., children and siblings) was reported.
Studies of Birth Order Without Control Group in a Systematic Review, up to 2012.
| First Author, Year (Reference No.) | Region | StudyDesign | Age Range, Years | Outcome | Birth Order | Observed Distribution | Expected Distribution | Greenwood-Yule Method | Haldane-Smith Method |
| Cai, 2003 | Haimen, China | Case series | >36 | HCC | 1st | 29 | 26.27 | 1.10 | Observed<Expected, t = 2.17, df = 121, |
| 2nd | 28 | 22.27 | 1.26 | ||||||
| 3rd | 18 | 17.27 | 1.04 | ||||||
| 4th | 9 | 12.94 | 0.70 | ||||||
| ≥5th | 10 | 15.30 | 0.65 | ||||||
| Cao, 2005 | Luoyang, China | Case series | Adults | HCC | 1st | 19 | 16.75 | 1.13 | Observed<Expected, t = 0.95, df = 62, |
| 2nd | 15 | 13.75 | 1.09 | ||||||
| 3rd | 11 | 12.25 | 0.90 | ||||||
| 4th | 10 | 9.25 | 1.08 | ||||||
| ≥5th | 8 | 11.00 | 0.73 | ||||||
| Song, 2009 | Shunde, China | Case series | Adults | HCC | 1st | 17 | 13.92 | 1.22 | Observed<Expected, t = 2.20, df = 46, |
| 2nd | 15 | 10.92 | 1.37 | ||||||
| 3rd | 5 | 7.42 | 0.67 | ||||||
| 4th | 4 | 5.75 | 0.70 | ||||||
| ≥5th | 6 | 8.98 | 0.67 |
Abbreviations: df, degree of freedom; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma.
When age range was not available, study was categorized as children (<20 years old), adults (≥20 years old) or both children and adults.
Ratio of observed/expected number is presented.
Figure 2Effect measures and 95% CIs for the association between maternal HBV sero-status and HBV-related outcomes.
Odds ratios for case-control or cross-sectional studies [22]–[24], [29]–[33] and risk ratios for cohort studies [25]–[28] are presented. Except the study by Wheeley [29] which assessed maternal HBeAg, all studies examined maternal HBsAg.
Figure 3Funnel plot for studies investigating the relation between maternal sero-marker and the persistence/presence of HBeAg.
Dashed line represents pseudo 95% confidence limits.