| Literature DB >> 26399765 |
A Mueller1, L Stoetter2, S Kalluvya3,4, A Stich5, C Majinge6, B Weissbrich7, C Kasang8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sub-Saharan Africa has a high prevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections. Health care workers (HCWs) are at high risk of contracting HBV infection through their occupation. Vaccination of HCWs against HBV is standard practice in many countries, but is often not implemented in resource-poor settings. We aimed with this cross-sectional study to determine HBV prevalence, HCW vaccination status, and the risk factors for HCWs contracting HBV infection in Tanzania.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26399765 PMCID: PMC4581415 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-015-1129-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
HBV infection status of HCWs from a Tanzanian tertiary hospital
| HBV serological markers | Interpretation | HCW ( | rHCW ( | nrHCW ( |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBsAg | Anti-HBc | Anti-HBs (U/mL) | subgroup | subgroup | |||
| + | + | <10 | Chronic infection | 42/7.0 % | 35/7.4 % | 7/5.6 % | 0.484 |
| - | - | <10 | Susceptible | 187/31.3 % | 144/30.4 % | 43/34.4 % | 0.498 |
| - | + | >10 | Immune after healed infection | 218/36.5 % | 171/36.2 % | 47/37.6 % | 0.765 |
| - | - | >10 | Immune after vaccination | 121/20.2 % | 99/20.9 % | 22/34.4 % | 0.432 |
| + | + | >10 | Healing infection | 1/0.2 % | 1/0.2 % | --- | -- |
| - | + | <10 | Indeterminate: Long-standing resolved infection with low anti-HBs; Current infection with low HBsAg | 29/4.8 % | 23/4.9 % | 6/4.8 % | 0.977 |
HBV hepatitis B virus, HCW health care worker
Subgroups: rHCWs who were frequently exposed to infectious materials and therefore at risk of contracting HBV infection, and nrHCWs who were considered not to be at risk of contracting HBV infection
Fig. 1HBV- status in HCWs in Tanzania. Prevalence of chronic HBV infection (HBsAg+, anti-HBc+, anti-HBs-), HBV immunity achieved by healed HBV infection (HBsAg-, anti-HBc+, anti-HBs+) or by vaccination (HBsAg-, anti-HBc-, anti-HBs+), indeterminate result (HBsAg-, anti-HBc+, anti-HBs-) and HBV susceptibility (HBsAg-, anti-HBc-, anti-HBs-) in Tanzanian HCWs in a tertiary hospital as determined by HBV serology. HBV: hepatitis B virus; HCWs: health care workers
Sensitivity and Specificity of Surescreen anti-HBs Rapid test compared to Architect anti-HBs
| Architect anti-HBs negative <10 IU/L | Architect anti-HBs positive >10 IU/L | |
|---|---|---|
| Rapid test anti-HBs negative | 247 | 65 |
| Rapid test anti-HBs positive | 8 | 272 |
| Total | 255 | 337 |
Specificity: anti-HBs10 = 247/255 = 96.9 %
Sensitivity: anti-HBs10 = 272/337 = 80.7 %
Risk factors for contracting hepatitis B virus and current HBV infection
| Variables | Current HBV Infection (HBsAg +) | Contracting HBV (Anti HBc+) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratio |
| Odds ratio |
| |
| Gender (Ref = Male) | ||||
| Female | 0.45 [0.24–0.84] | 0.0146* | 0.89 [0.64–1.24] | 0.5044 |
| Age (Ref =16–30) | ||||
| 31–40 | 0.91 [0.43–1.90] | 0.8526 | 1.43 [0.95–2.16] | 0.0939 |
| 41–50 | 0.76 [0.32–1.82] | 0.6687 | 1.75 [1.06–2.88] | 0.0304* |
| 51–65 | 0.43 [0.14–1.33] | 0.1574 | 2.77 [1.69–4.53] | <0.0001*** |
| Work duration (Ref = 0–5) | ||||
| 6–10 | 1.59 [0.74–3.42] | 0.2892 | 1.45 [0.92–2.28] | 0.1286 |
| >11 | 0.74 [0.35–1.58] | 0.4650 | 2.51 [1.74–3.63] | <0.0001*** |
| Profession (Ref = Administration) | ||||
| Medical Doctors (Surgeons, Physicians, Students) | 3.69 [0.81–16.86] | 0.0923 | 1.56 [0.87–2.82] | 0.1767 |
| Nursing staff | 2.41 [0.54–10.77] | 0.3816 | 1.00 [0.58–1.70] | 1 |
| Laboratory personnel | 1.29 [0.06–28.71] | 1 | 1.54 [0.40–5.96] | 0.7370 |
| Allied Sciences | 1.34 [0.12–15.44] | 1 | 0.64 [0.26–1.62] | 0.3674 |
| Technical Services | 5.15 [0.89–29.87] | 0.0667 | 1.18 [0.50–2.78] | 0.8275 |
| Cleaning Staff | 2.70 [0.54–13.40] | 0.3042 | 1.52 [0.81–2.84] | 0.2057 |
| Risk factors (Ref = Yes) | ||||
| Blood transfusion | 0.44 [0.10–1.88] | 0.4156 | 1.02 [0.59–1.76] | 1 |
| Operation | 0.97 [0.48–1.99] | 1 | 1.08 [0.75–1.55] | 0.7103 |
| i.m./i.v.drug administration | 1.47 [0.44–4.90] | 0.7883 | 1.50 [0.86–2.61] | 0.1677 |
| Needle stick injury | 0.96 [0.50–1.84] | 1 | 1.12 [0.80–1.56] | 0.5504 |
Fig. 2Risk of HCWs contracting HBV by age. Risk of contracting HBV (based on anti-HBc-positivity tests) by age group in health care workers at occupational risk (rHCW) or those not at occupational risk (nrHCW). Data are shown as a risk factor odds ratio table. HBV: hepatitis B virus
Fig. 3Exposure to HBV in Tanzanian HCWs with and without additional risk factors. Anti-HBc positivity (contact with HBV) in HCWs with additional risk factors (49.6 %) versus professionals without additional risk factors (34.2 %; p = 0.065 Chi square Test).