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Hepatitis B and Hepatitis B Vaccine

Hepatitis B Virus Infection. More than 350 million chronically infected worldwideEstablished cause of chronic hepatitis and cirrhosisHuman carcinogen

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Hepatitis B and Hepatitis B Vaccine

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    1. Hepatitis B and Hepatitis B Vaccine

    2. Hepatitis B Virus Infection More than 350 million chronically infected worldwide Established cause of chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis Human carcinogencause of up to 80% of hepatocellular carcinomas More than 600,000 deaths worldwide in 2002

    3. Hepatitis B Complications Fulminant hepatitis Hospitalization Cirrhosis Hepatocellular carcinoma Death

    4. Risk of Chronic HBV Carriage by Age of Infection

    5. Hepatitis B Perinatal Transmission* If mother positive for HBsAg and HBeAg 70%-90% of infants infected 90% of infected infants become chronically infected If positive for HBsAg only 5%-20% of infants infected 90% of infected infants become chronically infected

    6. Global Patterns of Chronic HBV Infection High (>8%): 45% of global population lifetime risk of infection >60% early childhood infections common Intermediate (2%-7%): 43% of global population lifetime risk of infection 20%-60% infections occur in all age groups Low (<2%): 12% of global population lifetime risk of infection <20% most infections occur in adult risk groups

    7. HBV Disease Burden in the United States Prevaccine era estimated 300,000 persons infected annually, including 24,000 infants and children 2005 estimated 51,000 infections

    8. Risk Factors for Hepatitis B This graphic shows the distribution of risk factors in 2001. Persons with multiple sexual contacts, men who have sex with men, and sexual contact with a person known to have HBV infection account for 54 percent of cases with a known risk factor. Injection drug use accounts for 20 percent of cases. About 3 percent of cases are in people who have household contact with a person with acute or chronic hepatitis B. Fifteen years ago, health care workers accounted for 2 percent of HBV infections- 2 or 3 thousand new infections each year. Since that time, the rate of infection among health care workers has declined by 95 percent, and is now lower than the rate for the general population. Hepatitis B vaccine has made occupational HBV infection a thing of the past. This graphic shows the distribution of risk factors in 2001. Persons with multiple sexual contacts, men who have sex with men, and sexual contact with a person known to have HBV infection account for 54 percent of cases with a known risk factor. Injection drug use accounts for 20 percent of cases. About 3 percent of cases are in people who have household contact with a person with acute or chronic hepatitis B. Fifteen years ago, health care workers accounted for 2 percent of HBV infections- 2 or 3 thousand new infections each year. Since that time, the rate of infection among health care workers has declined by 95 percent, and is now lower than the rate for the general population. Hepatitis B vaccine has made occupational HBV infection a thing of the past.

    9. Hepatitis B Virus Infection by Duration of High-Risk Behavior

    10. Strategy to Eliminate Hepatitis B Virus TransmissionUnited States Prevent perinatal HBV transmission Routine vaccination of all infants Vaccination of children in high-risk groups Vaccination of adolescents Vaccination of adults in high-risk groups

    11. Hepatitis B Vaccine Composition Recombinant HBsAg Efficacy 95% (Range, 80%-100%) Duration of Immunity 20 years or more Schedule 3 Doses Booster doses not routinely recommended

    12. Hepatitis B Vaccine

    13. Dose+ Primary 1 Primary 2 Primary 3

    14. Dose Primary 1 Primary 2 Primary 3

    15. Adults at Risk for HBV Infection Sexual exposure sex partners of HBsAg-positive persons sexually active persons not in a long-term, mutually monogamous relationship* persons seeking evaluation or treatment for a sexually transmitted disease men who have sex with men

    16. Adults at Risk for HBV Infection Percutaneous or mucosal exposure to blood current or recent IDU household contacts of HBsAg-positive persons residents and staff of facilities for developmentally disabled persons healthcare and public safety workers with risk for exposure to blood or blood-contaminated body fluids persons with end-stage renal disease

    17. Adults at Risk for HBV Infection Other groups international travelers to regions with high or intermediate levels (HBsAg prevalence of 2% or higher) of endemic HBV infection persons with HIV infection

    18. Prevaccination Serologic Testing Not indicated before routine vaccination of infants or children Recommended for all persons born in Africa, Asia, the Pacific Islands, and other regions with HBsAg prevalence of 8% or higher household, sex, and needle-sharing contacts of HBsAg-positive persons HIV-infected persons Consider for Groups with high risk of HBV infection (MSM, IDU, incarcerated persons)

    19. Postvaccination Serologic Testing Not routinely recommended following vaccination of infants, children, adolescents, or most adults Recommended for: Infants born to HBsAg+ women Hemodialysis patients Immunodeficient persons Sex partners of persons with chronic HBV infection Certain healthcare personnel

    20. Postvaccination Serologic Testing Healthcare personnel who have contact with patients or blood should be tested for anti-HBs (antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen) 1 to 2 months after completion of the 3-dose series

    21. Management of Nonresponse to Hepatitis B Vaccine Complete a second series of three doses Should be given on the usual schedule of 0, 1 and 6 months Retest 1-2 months after completing the second series

    22. Prevention of Perinatal Hepatitis B Virus Infection Begin treatment within 12 hours of birth Hepatitis B vaccine (first dose) and HBIG at different sites Complete vaccination series at 6 months of age Test for response after completion of at least 3 doses of the HepB series at 9 through 18 months of age (generally at the next well-child visit)

    23. Hepatitis B Vaccine Adverse Reactions Pain at injection site Mild systemic complaints (fatigue, headache) Temperature =99.9F (37.7C) Severe systemic reactions

    24. Hepatitis B Vaccine Contraindications and Precautions Severe allergic reaction to a vaccine component or following a prior dose Moderate or severe acute illness

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