Hepatitis C — Role of Perinatal Transmission
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
- Vol. 38 (4) , 424-427
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1479-828x.1998.tb03102.x
Abstract
Summary: To evaluate the role of perinatal transmission in the spread of hepatitis C virus (HCV), we screened a cohort of pregnant intravenous drug using (IVDU) women for HCV antibody detection; where seropositive HCV RNA detection by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was found we followed the infants longitudinally for HCV antibody and HCV RNA. Serum prevalence for HCV for this population was 80% with HCV RNA detected in 50%. Recruitment and follow‐up over a 3‐year period of a cohort of 83 seropositive women, their 91 newborns and 16 siblings of newborns, showed that there had been a 3% perinatal transmission rate with 1 sibling also infected. These positive cases were defined as transient in 1 case (HCV RNA positive by PCR at 1 month, but seronegative and HCV RNA negative at 10 months of age), 2 unevaluable (HCV RNA positive at 2 months of age, but patients lost to follow‐up), and 1 chronic infection in a child at 34 months (positive HCV RNA and seropositive 34‐month sibling). Maternal HCV RNA levels for those with infected infants was a mean 40‐fold greater than those whose babies were uninfected, although this did not reach statistical significance. Of the remaining infants, the majority (93%) had lost passively acquired maternal antibodies by 9 months of age and all by 12 months. Of 18 women who were HCV seropositive and breast feeding (66% of whom were HCV RNA positive in their sera), none had detectable HCV RNA in breast milk. Hence we conclude that transmission of HCV from mother to infant appears to be of low frequency and positivity appears to correlate with maternal circulating viral load.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mother-to-infant transmission of hepatitis C virus: A prospective studyEuropean Journal of Pediatrics, 1995
- Absence of infection in breast-fed infants born to hepatitis C virus-infected mothersThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1995
- Perinatal transmission and manifestation of hepatitis C virus infection in a high risk populationThe Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1995
- Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis C VirusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Sequence variability in the 5' non-coding region of hepatitis C virus: identification of a new virus type and restrictions on sequence diversityJournal of General Virology, 1993
- Infrequent Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis C VirusThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993
- The Incidence of Vertical Transmission of Hepatitis C Virus.The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1993
- Vertical transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) detected by HCV-RNA analysis.Gut, 1993
- Isolation of a cDNA cLone Derived from a Blood-Borne Non-A, Non-B Viral Hepatitis GenomeScience, 1989