The relationship of maternal hepatitis B e antigen and response to vaccination of infants born to women with chronic infection

Author:

Jiang Hongxiu,Chen Chao,Yuan Deping,Ye Xiajun,Chen Yan,Han Guorong,Zhou Guanlun,Ju Yuhao,Cao Minkai

Abstract

Abstract Background The relationship of maternal HBeAg and infants’ response to hepatitis B vaccine remains controversial. This study aims to observe the dynamic changes in infant birth HBV markers and study the time-varying effects of maternal HBeAg on vaccination response of infants born to women with chronic HBV infection. Methods 3163 infants born to HBsAg positive mothers including 1737 with maternal HBeAg positive in group A and 1426 negative in group B were enrolled eventually. Demographic information and laboratory tests were collected at birth, 7-12th and 24th month. The dynamic changes of infant HBV markers and HBsAb titers at different time points were compared between the two groups. Results The infant HBV markers at birth displayed different modes. During the follow-up, we observed a significant downward trend in the positive rates of HBsAg, HBeAg, HBeAb and HBcAb. The HBsAg of two groups switched to negative at 7–12 months and HBeAg in Group A became negative at 24 months. The HBsAb titers of the infants in the two groups were 576.91(192.8–1000.0) vs 719.67(208.1–1000.0) at 7–12 months (Z = -3.049, P = 0.002) and 783.5(227.8–1000.0) vs 891.4(234.0–1000.0) at 24 months (Z = -0.853, P = 0.394). High HBV DNA viral load (OR 1.260, 95% CI 1.139–1.395, P < 0.001) and maternal HBeAg level (OR 1.003, 95% CI 1.002–1.003, P < 0.001) were associated with the higher HBeAg positive rate of infants. Conclusions Maternal HBeAg did affect the infants’ immune response to vaccination and reduce the anti-response at 7-12th month temporarily, but these influences were negligible by 24th months after birth, which proved that the maternal HBeAg would not induce immune tolerance of infants from a long-term perspective.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

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