| Literature DB >> 25248369 |
Yung-Chieh Chang, Jen-Hung Wang, Yu-Sheng Chen, Jun-Song Lin, Ching-Feng Cheng, Chia-Hsiang Chu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current consensus does not support the use of a universal booster of hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine because there is an anamnestic response in almost all children 15 years after universal infant HBV vaccination. We aimed to provide a booster strategy among adolescents as a result of their changes in lifestyle and sexual activity.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25248369 PMCID: PMC4246462 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flow chart of study design.
Figure 2The trend of anti-HBs seropositivity rate and median titers by different age group and time frame. (A) The trend of anti-HBs seropositive rate by age (2004-2012). (B) The trend of median titer value of anti-HBs by age (2007-2012).
Demographics data and seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers and titers
| Age group | 6 y/o | 12 y/o | 15 y/o | 18 y/o | 6-12 y/o | 15-18 y/o |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item | (n = 524) | (n = 450) | (n = 1464) | (n = 4512) | (n = 974) | (n = 5976) |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male, n (%) | 299(57.1) | 205(45.6) | 740(50.5) | 1657(36.7) | 504(51.7) | 2397(40.1) |
| Female, n (%) | 225(42.9) | 245(54.4) | 724(49.5) | 2855(63.3) | 470(48.3) | 3579(59.9) |
| Age (Mean ± SD, yr) | 6.5 ± 0.3 | 12.5 ± 0.3 | 15.5 ± 0.5 | 18.7 ± 0.7 | 9.3 ± 3.0 | 17.9 ± 1.5 |
| Anti-HBs (+), n | 332 | 142 | 574 | 2033 | 474 | 2607 |
| (%, 95% CI) | (63.4, 59.3-67.5) | (31.6, 27.3-35.9) | (39.2, 36.7-41.7) | (45.1, 43.6-46.6) | (48.7, 45.6-51.8) | (43.6, 42.3-44.9) |
| Anti-HBs (−), n | 192 | 308 | 890 | 2479 | 500 | 3369 |
| (%, 95% CI) | (36.6, 32.5-40.7) | (68.4, 64.1-72.7) | (60.8, 58.3-63.3) | (54.9, 53.4-56.4) | (51.3, 48.2-54.4) | (56.4, 55.1-57.7) |
| P-value | <0.001* | 0.003* | ||||
| Anti-HBs median titer | 21.2 | NA | 3.9 | 4.8 | 21.2 | 4.6 |
| P-value | <0.001* | <0.001* | ||||
| HBsAg (+), n | 1 | 7 | 16 | 56 | 8 | 72 |
| (%, 95% CI) | (0.2, 0.0-0.6) | (1.6, 0.4-2.8) | (1.1, 0.6-1.6) | (1.2, 0.9-1.5) | (0.8, 0.2-1.4) | (1.2, 0.9-1.5) |
| HBsAg (−), n | 523 | 443 | 1448 | 4456 | 966 | 5904 |
| (%, 95% CI) | (99.8, 99.4-100.0) | (98.4, 97.2-99.6) | (98.9, 98.4-99.4) | (98.8, 98.5-99.1) | (99.2, 98.6-99.8) | (98.8, 98.5-99.1) |
| P-value | 0.154 | 0.336 | ||||
Note: Anti-HBs, antibody to HBV surface antigen; HBsAg, HBV surface antigen; y/o, year old; NA, not available; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; Data are presented as or n and percentage.
*p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant after test.
Comparison of seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers by different age and vaccine type received in infancy
| Age group | Vaccine type | Plasma-derived | Recombinant | Total | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Items | |||||
| 15 y/o | N [birth cohort] | 410 [1989–91] | 886 [1993–97] | 1296 | |
| anti-HBs (+), n | 177 | 307 | 484 | 0.004* | |
| (%, 95% CI) | (43.2, 38.4-48.0) | (34.7, 31.6-37.8) | (37.3, 34.3-39.9) | ||
| anti-HBs (−), n | 233 | 579 | 812 | ||
| (%, 95% CI) | (56.8, 52.0-61.6) | (65.3, 62.2-68.4) | (62.7, 60.1-65.3) | ||
| HBsAg (+), n | 7 | 6 | 13 | 0.129 | |
| (%, 95% CI) | (1.7, 0.4-3.0) | (0.7, 0.2-1.2) | (1.0, 0.5-1.5) | ||
| HBsAg (−), n | 403 | 880 | 1283 | ||
| (%, 95% CI) | (98.3, 97.0-99.6) | (99.3, 98.8-99.8) | (99.0, 98.5-99.5) | ||
| 18 y/o | N [birth cohort] | 2575 [1987–91] | 1295 [1993–94] | 3870 | |
| anti-HBs (+), n | 1184 | 529 | 1713 | 0.003* | |
| (%, 95% CI) | (46.0, 44.1-47.9) | (40.8, 38.1-43.5) | (44.3, 42.7-45.9) | ||
| anti-HBs (−), n | 1391 | 766 | 2157 | ||
| (%, 95% CI) | (54.0, 52.1-55.9) | (59.2, 56.5-61.9) | (55.7, 54.1-57.3) | ||
| HBsAg (+), n | 40 | 10 | 50 | 0.049* | |
| (%, 95% CI) | (1.6, 1.1-2.1) | (0.8, 0.3-1.3) | (1.3, 0.9-1.7) | ||
| HBsAg (−), n | 2535 | 1285 | 3820 | ||
| (%, 95% CI) | (98.4, 97.9-98.9) | (99.2, 98.7-99.7) | (98.7, 98.3-99.1) |
Note: anti-HBs, antibody to HBV surface antigen; HBsAg, HBV surface antigen; y/o, year old; Data are presented as or n and percentage.
*p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant after test.
Booster response rate and change of overall anti-HBs seropositive rate before and after one booster dose
| Year | Seroprevalence, n (%) | Subjects, n (%) | Post-booster | Anti-HBs titer (median) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [birth cohort] | Anti-HBs (+) | Anti-HBs (−) | Booster rate | Response rate | Anti-HBs (+) | Before | After |
| 2007 [1992] | 90 (53.6) | 78 (46.4) | 66 (84.6) | 55 (83.3) | 86.3% | 2.1 ± 2.3 | 399.4 ± 394.0 |
| (P50 = 1.4) | (P50 = 288.5) | ||||||
| 2008 [1993] | 67 (39.4) | 103 (60.6) | 90 (87.4) | 75 (83.3) | 83.5% | 1.7 ± 2.1 | 480.7 ± 423.4 |
| (P50 = 0.7) | (P50 = 365.5) | ||||||
| 2009 [1994] | 85 (49.4) | 87 (50.6) | 76 (87.4) | 77 (100.0) | 93.6% | 1.5 ± 2.2 | 678.4 ± 385.5 |
| (P50 = 0.3) | (P50 = 975.0) | ||||||
| 2010 [1995] | 61 (35.1) | 113 (64.9) | 96 (85.0) | 85 (87.6) | 83.4% | 2.7 ± 2.0 | 540.2 ± 421.2 |
| (P50 = 2.3) | (P50 = 556.5) | ||||||
| 2011 [1996] | 40 (23.7) | 129 (76.3) | 112 (86.8) | 111 (99.1) | 89.3% | 1.2 ± 2.0 | 589.3 ± 377.2 |
| (P50 = 0.2) | (P50 = 555.4) | ||||||
| 2012 [1997] | 54 (26.9) | 147 (73.1) | 130 (88.4) | 126 (96.9) | 89.5% | 2.6 ± 2.8 | 579.2 ± 387.7 |
| (P50 = 1.7) | (P50 = 573.7) | ||||||
| Total | 397 (37.7) | 657 (62.3) | 570 (86.8) | 529 (92.5) | 87.7% | 2.0 ± 2.3 | 551.5 ± 403.6 |
| (P50 = 1.1) | (P50 = 545.5) | ||||||
Figure 3Change of hepatitis B virus (HBV) seromarkers follow up for 3-year after HBV booster.
Comparison of seroprevalence of HBsAg and anti-HBs in “the same school” and “the others” groups
| Item | 18-year age group (birth cohort 1993–1994) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| The same school (n = 38) | The others (n = 1256) | P-value | |
| Anti-HBs (+), n (%, 95% CI) | 29 (76.3, 62.8-89.8) | 499 (39.7, 37.0-42.4) | <0.001* |
| Anti-HBs (−), n (%, 95% CI) | 9 (23.7, 10.2-37.2) | 757 (60.3, 57.6-63.0) | |
| Anti-HBs titer, mean ± SD (median) | 157.6 ± 281.3 (P50 = 24.7) | 58.8 ± 145.9 (P50 = 4.2) | <0.001* |
| HBsAg (+), n (%) | 0 (0.0) | 10 (0.8%) | 0.581 |
| HBsAg (−), n (%) | 38 (100.0) | 1246 (99.2%) | |
Data are presented as n and percentage or mean ± standard deviation (median).
*p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant after test.