Success of a program of routine prenatal screening for hepatitis B surface antigen: the first 2 years.
- 15 December 1990
- journal article
- Vol. 143 (12) , 1317-21
Abstract
Prenatal screening for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) restricted to women with defined risk factors for chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection fails to identify many carriers. A centralized program of routine HBsAg screening for all pregnant women in Alberta was introduced in 1985. We collected and analysed data for the first 2 years of the program in Edmonton to determine the frequency of risk factors for HBsAg positivity, the proportion of multiparous HBsAg-positive women not identified in previous pregnancies, the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of providing immunoprophylaxis to infants at risk of HBV infection and the degree of success in inducing adequate protection. A total of 149 women (158 pregnancies) were found to be HBsAg positive. Risk factors were readily ascertainable for 85% of the women; the remaining 15% would not have been identified through risk-selective screening. The most common risk factors were Oriental ethnic origin, history of hepatitis, jaundice or multiple transfusions of blood or blood products, and occupational exposure to blood. Although 86% of the multiparous HBsAg-positive women had risk factors, only 7% had been identified in previous pregnancies. The Alberta program appears to be cost-effective. We conclude that only routine prenatal screening will identify all infants at risk of perinatal HBV infection and that a comprehensive public health program involving central laboratories, private physicians and public health staff can be highly effective and efficient in protecting infants against hepatitis B.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- HEPATITIS-B INFECTION IN A LARGE MUNICIPAL OBSTETRICAL POPULATION - CHARACTERIZATION AND PREVENTION OF PERINATAL TRANSMISSION1990
- PREVENTION OF PERINATAL TRANSMISSION OF HEPATITIS B VIRUS: THE SENSITIVITY, SPECIFICITY, AND PREDICTIVE VALUE OF THE RECOMMENDED SCREENING QUESTIONS TO DETECT HIGH-RISK WOMEN IN AN OBSTETRIC POPULATIONAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1987
- Should All Pregnant Women Be Screened for Hepatitis B?Annals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- THE PREGNANT HEPATITIS-B CARRIER - EVIDENCE FAVORING COMPREHENSIVE ANTEPARTUM SCREENING1987
- Routine hepatitis screening in adolescent pregnancies: Is it cost effective?American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1987
- PREVALENCE OF HEPATITIS-B VIRUS-INFECTION IN PREGNANT-WOMEN IN THE MONTREAL AREA1986
- PREVENTION OF PERINATALLY TRANSMITTED HEPATITIS B VIRUS INFECTIONS WITH HEPATITIS B IMMUNE GLOBULIN AND HEPATITIS B VACCINEThe Lancet, 1983
- Hepatitis B: a controllable disease.1983
- Prevention of Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection from Mothers to Infants in the United StatesPediatrics, 1983
- Solid-phase enzyme immunoassay for hepatitis B surface antigen.Clinical Chemistry, 1977