Qian Sun1, Terence T Lao2, Mingyu Du1, Min Xie1, Yonghu Sun1, Bing Bai1, Junnan Ma1, Tianying Zhu1, Shengnan Yu1, Runmei Ma3,4. 1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University, PO box 650032, No.295, Xi Chang Road, Kunming, Yunnan, China. 2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China. 3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University, PO box 650032, No.295, Xi Chang Road, Kunming, Yunnan, China. marunmeikmmc@163.com. 4. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kunming Angel Women and Children's Hospital, PO box 650108, No 199, Dianmian Road, Kunming, Yunnan, China. marunmeikmmc@163.com.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chinese population has a high prevalence of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, the impact of which on pregnancy outcome remains controversial. A single-center retrospective cohort study was performed in Kunming, a multi-ethnic city in south-western China to examine this issue. METHODS: The singleton pregnancies delivering at ≥28 weeks gestation under our care in 2005-2017 constituted the study cohort. Maternal characteristics and pregnancy outcome were compared between mothers with and without seropositivity for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) determined at routine antenatal screening. RESULTS: Among the 49,479 gravidae in the cohort, the 1624 (3.3%) HBsAg seropositive gravidae had a lower incidence of nulliparity (RR 0.963, 95% CI 0.935-0.992) and having received tertiary education (RR 0.829, 95% CI 0.784-0.827). There was no significant difference in the medical history, pregnancy complications, or labor or perinatal outcome, except that HBV carriers had significantly lower incidence of labor induction (RR 0.827, 95% CI 0.714-0.958) and of small-for-gestational age (SGA) infants (RR 0.854, 95% CI 0.734-0.994). On regression analysis, maternal HBV carriage was independently associated with spontaneous labor (aRR 1.231, 95% CI 1.044-1.451) and reduced SGA infants (aRR 0.842, 95% CI 0.712-0.997). CONCLUSIONS: Our 3.3% prevalence of maternal HBV infection was around the lower range determined in the Chinese population. The association with spontaneous labor and reduced SGA infants could have helped to promote the perpetuation of the infection through enhanced survival of the offspring infected at birth, thus explaining the high prevalence in the Chinese population.
BACKGROUND: Chinese population has a high prevalence of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, the impact of which on pregnancy outcome remains controversial. A single-center retrospective cohort study was performed in Kunming, a multi-ethnic city in south-western China to examine this issue. METHODS: The singleton pregnancies delivering at ≥28 weeks gestation under our care in 2005-2017 constituted the study cohort. Maternal characteristics and pregnancy outcome were compared between mothers with and without seropositivity for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) determined at routine antenatal screening. RESULTS: Among the 49,479 gravidae in the cohort, the 1624 (3.3%) HBsAg seropositive gravidae had a lower incidence of nulliparity (RR 0.963, 95% CI 0.935-0.992) and having received tertiary education (RR 0.829, 95% CI 0.784-0.827). There was no significant difference in the medical history, pregnancy complications, or labor or perinatal outcome, except that HBV carriers had significantly lower incidence of labor induction (RR 0.827, 95% CI 0.714-0.958) and of small-for-gestational age (SGA) infants (RR 0.854, 95% CI 0.734-0.994). On regression analysis, maternal HBV carriage was independently associated with spontaneous labor (aRR 1.231, 95% CI 1.044-1.451) and reduced SGA infants (aRR 0.842, 95% CI 0.712-0.997). CONCLUSIONS: Our 3.3% prevalence of maternal HBV infection was around the lower range determined in the Chinese population. The association with spontaneous labor and reduced SGA infants could have helped to promote the perpetuation of the infection through enhanced survival of the offspring infected at birth, thus explaining the high prevalence in the Chinese population.
Entities:
Keywords:
Chinese; Infection; Maternal hepatitis B virus; Pregnancy outcome; Prevalence
Authors: Dan Liu; Yan Liu; Jiaqi Ni; Hailong Li; Linan Zeng; Chuan Zhang; Li Zhang; Qin Yu; Bin Wu; Lingli Zhang Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2022-04-12