| Literature DB >> 24397793 |
Thomas J Peto1, Maimuma E Mendy, Yamundow Lowe, Emily L Webb, Hilton C Whittle, Andrew J Hall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gambian infants were not routinely vaccinated against hepatitis B virus (HBV) before 1986. During 1986-90 the Gambia Hepatitis Intervention Study (GHIS) allocated 125,000 infants, by area, to vaccination or not and thereafter all infants were offered the vaccine through the nationwide immunisation programme. We report HBV serology from samples of GHIS vaccinees and unvaccinated controls, and from children born later.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24397793 PMCID: PMC3898092 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study.
HBsAg status in early adult life by number of doses of HBV vaccine in infancy among GHIS participants with reliable original vaccination records still available
| 0 | 59/475 (12.4%) | 9.6 - 15.6 | 1 |
| 1 (partially vaccinated) | 2/ 13 (15.4%) | 1.9 - 45.4 | 1.28 |
| 2 (partially vaccinated) | 2/ 10 (20.0%) | 2.5 - 55.6 | 1.76 |
| 3 (fully vaccinated) | 1/ 63 ( 1.6%) | 0.4 - 8.5 | 0.11 |
| 4 (fully vaccinated) | 1/192 ( 0.5%) | 0.1 - 2.9 | 0.04 |
| Total | 65/753 | - | |
p (trend) <0.0001.
ALT elevation by HBsAg status in early adult life, comparing all HBsAg + cases vs a matched sample of twice as many HBsAg- controls 1986–90 births tested in 2007–08; analyses ignore vaccination status
| Below control mean | 76 (34.9%) | 288 (61.0%) | 1 |
| Mean to ULN | 115 (52.8%) | 173 (36.7%) | 2.5 |
| ALT 1-2x ULN | 18 ( 8.3%) | 10 ( 2.1%) | 6.8 |
| ALT >2x ULN | 9 ( 4.1%) | 1 ( 0.2%) | 34.1 |
p (trend) <0.0001.
*In HBsAg- controls, mean ALT is 16 IU/L and upper limit of normal (ULN) is 35 IU/L.
HBsAg positivity by age when surveyed in 2007–08 (and hence by year of birth) among 4613 children born since nationwide vaccination began in 1990 in The Gambia
| 1- 5 (2005) | 3/1921 (0.2%) |
| 5- 9 (2001) | 6/1591 (0.4%) |
| 10-14 (1996) | 10/ 825 (1.2%) |
| 15-17 (1993) | 5/ 276 (1.8%) |
p (trend) <0.0001.
Reports from The Gambia of infant HBV vaccination efficacy against chronic HBV infection (HBsAg+) at various ages in childhood
| Nationwide GHIS cohort, born 1986–90 and surveyed periodically in 1990–2008, vs concurrently born controls | |||
| ~4 | 4/720 (0.6) | 78/816 ( 9.6) | 94% (84–98) |
| ~9 | 4/675 (0.6) | 85/823 (10.3) | 95% (84–98) |
| ~15 | 2/492 (0.4) | 51/420 (13.2) | 97% (92–99) |
| ~20* | 2/255 (0.8) | 59/475 (12.4) | 94% (76–99) |
| Keneba village, born 1984–2002 and surveyed in 2003, vs historical controls surveyed in 1984 | |||
| 1-4 | 0/176 (0.0) | 24/236 (10.2) | |
| 5–9 | 2/203 (1.0) | 32/205 (15.6) | |
| 10–14 | 0/185 (0.0) | 19/135 (14.1) | |
| 15+ | 3/224 (1.3) | 8/47 (17.0) | |
*Present survey in 2007–08; 3 previous GHIS follow-up surveys took place during 1990–2004 [8,14,15]. Results for Keneba were from a survey in 2003 [13] of vaccinees born 1984–2002 and from a historical survey in 1984 of unvaccinated children.
**Age-specific results are unstable due to small numbers.
Figure 2Prevalence of chronic HBV infection in The Gambia, by year of birth: born before routine infant HBV vaccination; vaccinees and controls born during the Gambia Hepatitis Intervention Study (GHIS) in 1986–90; born since nationwide infant HBV vaccination. Key: Number positive for HBV surface antigen (HBsAg)/number surveyed, % positive, and range of ages in years (y) when surveyed. Open circles = unvaccinated, closed circles = vaccinated in infancy (or supposed to be, in the Gambian EPI). Keneba: Unvaccinated historical controls (one village, children surveyed in 1984 at ages 1–19 years). West Africa median: Median of survey-specific HBsAg prevalences in 83 population surveys of unvaccinated children or adults conducted between 1990–2009 in West Africa (Merrill & Hunter, 2011). GHIS: Vaccinees and concurrent controls in the Gambia Hepatitis Intervention Study of children born in 1986–90, and surveyed for the present study in 2007–08, at ages 17–22 years, 0 · 8% vs 12 · 4% p < 0 · 00001. EPI: Population sample of children born since 1990 and surveyed for the present study in 2007–08 to assess the effectiveness of nationwide infant HBV vaccination (in the Gambian Expanded Programme on Immunisation), 1990–97 births 1 · 4% vs 1998–2007 births 0 · 3%, p < 0 · 00001.