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A Comprehensive Immunization Strategy
to Eliminate Transmission of Hepatitis B Virus Infection in the United
States
Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) Part 1: Immunization of Infants, Children, and
Adolescents Please note:
Errata have been published for this article. To view the
errata, please click here and
here.
Prepared by Eric E. Mast, MD1, Harold S.
Margolis, MD,1 Anthony E. Fiore, MD,1 Edward W.
Brink, MD,2 Susan T. Goldstein, MD,1 Susan A. Wang,
MD,1 Linda A. Moyer,1 Beth P. Bell, MD,1
Miriam J. Alter, PhD1 1Division of Viral
Hepatitis, National Center for Infectious Diseases,
2Immunization Services Division, National Immunization
Program
The material in this report originated in the National
Center for Infectious Diseases, Rima F. Khabbaz, MD, Director, Division of
Viral Hepatitis, John W. Ward, MD, Director; and the National Immunization
Program, Anne Schuchat, MD, Director, Immunization Services Division,
Lance E. Rodewald, MD, Director.
Corresponding preparer: Eric E.
Mast, MD, Division of Viral Hepatitis, National Center for Infectious
Diseases, 1600 Clifton Road, NE, MS G-37, Atlanta, GA 30333. Telephone:
404-371-5460; Fax: 404-371-5221; E-mail: emast@cdc.gov.
Summary
This report is the first of a two-part statement from the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) that updates the strategy to
eliminate hepatitis B virus (HBV) transmission in the United States. The
report provides updated recommendations to improve prevention of perinatal
and early childhood HBV transmission, including implementation of
universal infant vaccination beginning at birth, and to increase vaccine
coverage among previously unvaccinated children and adolescents.
Strategies to enhance implementation of the recommendations include 1)
establishing standing orders for administration of hepatitis B vaccination
beginning at birth; 2) instituting delivery hospital policies and
procedures and case management programs to improve identification of and
administration of immunoprophylaxis to infants born to mothers who are
hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) positive and to mothers with unknown
HBsAg status at the time of delivery; and 3) implementing vaccination
record reviews for all children aged 11--12 years and children and
adolescents aged <19 years who were born in countries with intermediate
and high levels of HBV endemicity, adopting hepatitis B vaccine
requirements for school entry, and integrating hepatitis B vaccination
services into settings that serve adolescents. The second part of the ACIP
statement, which will include updated recommendations and strategies to
increase hepatitis B vaccination of adults, will be published
separately.
Strategy to Eliminate Hepatitis B
Virus Transmission
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a bloodborne and sexually transmitted virus.
Rates of new infection and acute disease are highest among adults, but
chronic infection is more likely to occur in persons infected as infants
or young children. Before hepatitis B vaccination programs became routine
in the United States, an estimated 30%--40% of chronic infections are
believed to have resulted from perinatal or early childhood transmission,
even though <10% of reported cases of hepatitis B occurred in children
aged <10 years (1). Chronically infected persons are at
increased lifetime risk for cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
and also serve as the main reservoir for continued HBV transmission.
Hepatitis B vaccination is the most effective measure to prevent HBV
infection and its consequences. Since they were first issued in 1982,
recommendations for hepatitis B vaccination have evolved into a
comprehensive strategy to eliminate HBV transmission in the United States
(2--6)
(Box
1). A primary focus of this strategy is universal vaccination of
infants to prevent early childhood HBV infection and to eventually protect
adolescents and adults from infection. Other components include routine
screening of all pregnant women for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
and postexposure immunoprophylaxis of infants born to HBsAg-positive
women, vaccination of children and adolescents who were not previously
vaccinated, and vaccination of unvaccinated adults at increased risk for
infection.
To date, the immunization strategy has been implemented with
considerable success. Recent estimates indicate that >95% of pregnant
women are tested for HBsAg, and case management has been effective in
ensuring high levels of initiation and
completion of postexposure immunoprophylaxis among identified infants
born to HBsAg-positive women (7).
Hepatitis B vaccine has been successfully integrated into the childhood
vaccine schedule, and infant vaccine coverage levels are now equivalent to
those of other vaccines in the childhood schedule. During 1990--2004,
incidence of acute hepatitis B in the United States declined 75%. The
greatest decline (94%) occurred among children and adolescents, coincident
with an increase in hepatitis B vaccine coverage. As of 2004, among U.S.
children aged 19--35 months, >92% had been fully vaccinated with 3
doses of hepatitis B vaccine (8).
This success can be attributed in part to the established infrastructure
for vaccine delivery to children and to federal support for perinatal
hepatitis B prevention programs.
Vaccine coverage among adolescents has also increased substantially.
Preliminary data demonstrate that 50%--60% of adolescents aged 13--15
years have records indicating vaccination (with 3 doses) against hepatitis
B (CDC, unpublished data, 2003). As of November 2005, a total of 34 states
require vaccination for middle-school entry (9). Certain programs
provide hepatitis B vaccine to youth who engage in behaviors that place
them at high risk for HBV infection (i.e., injection-drug use, having more
than one sex partner, and male sexual activity with other males), and
adolescent hepatitis B vaccination is included as a Health Plan Employer
Data Information Set (HEDIS) measure (10).
Despite these successes, challenges remain. Even with improvements in
the management of pregnant women, only approximately 50% of expected
births to HBsAg-positive women are identified (on the basis of application
of racial/ethnic-specific HBsAg prevalence estimates to U.S. natality
data) for case management, which maximizes timely delivery of postexposure
immunoprophylaxis (11; CDC, unpublished data, 2004). The need for
proper management of women without prenatal care, including HBsAg testing
at the time of admission for delivery and administration of the first dose
of vaccine to infants <12 hours of birth, is underscored by the higher
prevalence of HBsAg seropositivity among these women than among women who
are screened prenatally (12). Even when maternal HBsAg testing does
occur, certain infants of HBsAg-positive mothers do not receive
postexposure immunoprophylaxis because of testing errors and lapses in
reporting of test results (13), and infants of women with unknown
HBsAg status at the time of delivery often do not receive a birth dose of
vaccine (14). Birth dose coverage in 2004 was only 46% (National
Immunization Survey, unpublished data, 2004), and coverage has not
returned to levels from before July 1999 (54%), when recommendations were
made to temporarily suspend administration of hepatitis B vaccines at
birth until vaccines that do not contain thimerosal as a preservative
became available (15). Among adolescents, efforts to prevent HBV
transmission are hampered by the low rate of health-care visits in this
age group compared with that of young children and the frequency of
initiation of high-risk behaviors.
To address these remaining challenges and accelerate progress toward
elimination of HBV transmission in the United States, the ACIP has updated
the hepatitis B immunization recommendations for infants, children, and
adolescents and supplemented the recommendations with strategies for
implementation. The recommendations and implementation strategies address
prevention of perinatal and early childhood transmission and routine
vaccination of children and adolescents. A main focus is on universal
infant vaccination beginning at birth, which provides a "safety net" for
prevention of perinatal infection, prevents early childhood infections,
facilitates implementation of universal vaccination recommendations, and
prevents infections in adolescents and adults. The second part of the ACIP
statement, which includes updated recommendations and implementation
strategies to increase hepatitis B vaccination among unvaccinated adults,
will be published separately (16).
Major Updates to the
Recommendations
This report provides updated recommendations and approaches to address
challenges in implementing the strategy to eliminate HBV transmission in
the United States. These include the following measures:
- Improve prevention of perinatal and early childhood HBV
transmission. Implement delivery hospital policies and procedures,
case-management programs, and laws and regulations to improve
identification of infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers and to mothers
with unknown HBsAg status at the time of delivery, ensure administration
of appropriate postexposure immunoprophylaxis to these infants beginning
at birth, and administer a birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine to
medically stable infants who weigh >2,000 g and who are born
to HBsAg-negative mothers.
- Improve vaccine coverage of children and adolescents who were not
previously vaccinated. Implement immunization record reviews for all
children aged 11--12 years and children and adolescents aged <19
years who were born in countries in which HBV endemicity is high or
intermediate (Figure
1 and Box
2); adopt hepatitis B vaccine requirements for school entry; and
vaccinate all unvaccinated adolescents in settings that provide
health-care services to persons in this age group.
Background
Clinical Features and Natural History of HBV Infection
HBV is a 42-nm DNA virus classified in the Hepadnaviridae
family. The liver is the primary site of HBV replication. After a
susceptible person is exposed, the virus enters the liver via the
bloodstream; no evidence exists indicating that the virus replicates at
mucosal surfaces. HBV infection can produce either asymptomatic or
symptomatic infection. The average incubation period is 90 days (range:
60--150 days) from exposure to onset of jaundice and 60 days (range:
40--90 days) from exposure to onset of abnormal serum alanine
aminotransferase (ALT) levels (17,18).
The onset of acute disease is usually insidious. Infants and young
children (aged <10 years) are typically asymptomatic (19). When
present, clinical symptoms and signs might include anorexia, malaise,
nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and jaundice. Extrahepatic
manifestations of disease (e.g., skin rashes, arthralgias, and arthritis)
also can occur (20). The fatality rate among persons with reported
acute hepatitis B is 0.5%--1.5%, with highest rates in adults aged >60
years (21).
Although the consequences of acute hepatitis B can be severe, the
majority of serious sequelae associated with HBV disease occur in persons
who are chronically infected. Persons with chronic infection also serve as
the major reservoir for continued HBV transmission. Chronic infection
occurs in approximately 90% of infected infants, 30% of infected children
aged <5 years, and <5% of infected persons aged >5 years,
with continuing viral replication in the liver and persistent viremia
(19,22--24). Primary infections also become chronic more
frequently in immunosuppressed persons (e.g., hemodialysis patients and
persons with human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] infection)
(23,25,26). On the basis of data from follow-up studies of persons
infected with HBV as infants or young children, approximately 25% of those
with chronic infection die prematurely from cirrhosis or liver cancer; the
majority remain asymptomatic until onset of cirrhosis or end-stage liver
disease (27--29).
No specific treatment exists for acute hepatitis B. Persons who have
chronic HBV infection require medical evaluation and regular monitoring
(30,31). Therapeutic agents approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) for treatment of chronic hepatitis B can achieve
sustained suppression of HBV replication and remission of liver disease in
certain persons (31). Periodic screening with alfa fetoprotein or
imaging studies has been demonstrated to enhance early detection of HCC
(31). Chronically infected persons with HCC have been reported to
have experienced long-term survival after resection or ablation of small
HCCs, and persons who were screened had a substantial survival advantage
compared with historic controls (31).
Reinfection or reactivation of latent HBV infection has been reported
among certain groups of immunosuppressed persons, including renal
transplant recipients, HIV-infected patients, bone marrow transplant
recipients, and patients receiving chemotherapy (32--35). The
frequency with which this phenomenon occurs is unknown.
Interpretation of Serologic Markers of HBV Infection
The antigens and antibodies associated with HBV infection include HBsAg
and antibody to HBsAg (anti-HBs), hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) and
antibody to HBcAg (anti-HBc), and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and
antibody to HBeAg (anti-HBe). At least one serologic marker is present
during the different phases of HBV infection (Table
1) (18,36). Serologic assays are commercially available for all
markers except HBcAg because no free HBcAg circulates in blood.
The presence of a confirmed HBsAg result is indicative of ongoing HBV
infection. All HBsAg-positive persons should be considered infectious. In
newly infected persons, HBsAg is the only serologic marker detected during
the first 3--5 weeks after infection, and it persists for variable periods
at very low levels. The average time from exposure to detection of HBsAg
is 30 days (range: 6--60 days) (17,18). Highly sensitive
single-sample nucleic acid tests can detect HBV DNA in the serum of an
infected person 10--20 days before detection of HBsAg (37).
Transient HBsAg positivity has been reported for up to 18 days after
vaccination and is clinically insignificant (38,39).
Anti-HBc appears at the onset of symptoms or liver test abnormalities
in acute HBV infection and persists for life. Acute or recently acquired
infection can be distinguished by the presence of the IgM class of
anti-HBc, which is detected at the onset of acute hepatitis B and persists
for up to 6 months if the disease resolves. In patients who develop
chronic hepatitis B, IgM anti-HBc can persist at low levels during viral
replication and can result in positive tests for IgM anti-HBc (40).
In addition, false-positive IgM anti-HBc test results can occur. Because
the positive predictive value is low in asymptomatic persons, for
diagnosis of acute hepatitis B, testing for IgM anti-HBc should be limited
to persons with clinical evidence of acute hepatitis or an epidemiologic
link to a case.
In persons who recover from HBV infection, HBsAg is eliminated from the
blood, usually within 3--4 months, and anti-HBs develops during
convalescence. The presence of anti-HBs typically indicates immunity from
HBV infection. Infection or immunization with one genotype of HBV confers
immunity to all genotypes. In addition, anti-HBs can be detected for
several months after hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) administration.
The majority of persons who recover from natural infection will be
positive for both anti-HBs and anti-HBc, whereas persons who respond to
hepatitis B vaccine have only anti-HBs. In persons who become chronically
infected, HBsAg and anti-HBc persist, typically for life. HBsAg will
become undetectable in approximately 0.5%--2% of chronically infected
persons yearly, and anti-HBs will occur in the majority of these persons
(41--44).
In certain persons, the only HBV serologic marker detected in serum is
anti-HBc. Isolated anti-HBc can occur after HBV infection among persons
who have recovered but whose anti-HBs levels have waned or among persons
in whom anti-HBs failed to occur. Persons in the latter category include
those with circulating HBsAg levels not detectable by commercial assays.
These persons are unlikely to be infectious except under circumstances in
which they are the source for direct percutaneous exposure of susceptible
recipients to substantial quantities of virus (e.g., through blood
transfusion or following liver transplantation) (45). HBV
DNA has been detected in the blood of <5% of persons with isolated
anti-HBc (46). Typically, the frequency of isolated anti-HBc
relates directly to the prevalence of HBV infection in the population. In
populations with a high prevalence of HBV infection, isolated anti-HBc
likely indicates previous infection, with loss of anti-HBs. For persons in
populations with a low prevalence of HBV infection, an isolated anti-HBc
result often represents a false-positive reaction. The majority of these
persons have a primary anti-HBs response after a 3-dose series of
hepatitis B vaccine (47,48). Infants who are born to HBsAg-positive
mothers and who do not become infected might have detectable anti-HBc for
<24 months after birth from passively transferred maternal
antibody.
HBeAg can be detected in the serum of persons with acute or chronic HBV
infection. The presence of HBeAg correlates with viral replication and
high levels of virus (i.e., high infectivity) (49,50). Anti-HBe
correlates with the loss of replicating virus and with lower levels of
virus, although reversion to HBeAg positivity has been observed
(44).
Epidemiology of HBV Infection
Transmission
HBV is transmitted by percutaneous (i.e., puncture through the skin) or
mucosal (i.e., direct contact with mucous membranes) exposure to
infectious blood or to body fluids that contain blood. All HBsAg-positive
persons are infectious, but those who are also HBeAg positive are more
infectious because their blood contains high titers of HBV (typically
107--109 virions/mL) (49,50). Although HBsAg
has been detected in multiple body fluids, only serum, semen, and saliva
have been demonstrated to be infectious (51,52). HBV is
comparatively stable in the environment and remains viable for
>7 days on environmental surfaces at room temperature
(53). HBV at concentrations of 102--3 virions/mL can be
present on environmental surfaces in the absence of any visible blood and
still cause transmission (53,54).
For infants and children, the two primary sources of HBV infection are
perinatal transmission from infected mothers and horizontal transmission
from infected household contacts. Adolescents are at risk for HBV
infection primarily through high-risk sexual activity (i.e., sex with more
than one partner and male sexual activity with other males) and
injection-drug use (21). Transmission of HBV via transfusion of
blood and plasma-derived products is rare because of donor screening for
HBsAg and viral inactivation procedures.
For a newborn infant whose mother is positive for both HBsAg and HBeAg,
the risk for chronic HBV infection is 70%--90% by age 6 months in
the absence of postexposure immunoprophylaxis (55--57). For infants
of women who are HBsAg positive but HBeAg negative, the risk for chronic
infection is <10% in the absence of postexposure immunoprophylaxis
(58--60). Rare cases of fulminant hepatitis B among perinatally
infected infants also have been reported (61,62).
Studies suggest that breastfeeding by an HBsAg-positive mother does not
increase the risk for acquisition of HBV infection in the infant
(63).
Children who are not infected at birth remain at risk from long-term
interpersonal contact with their infected mothers. In one study, 38% of
infants who were born to HBsAg-positive mothers and who were not infected
perinatally became infected by age 4 years (64). In addition,
children living with any chronically infected persons are at risk for
becoming infected through percutaneous or mucosal exposures to blood or
infectious body fluids (e.g., sharing a toothbrush, contact with exudates
from dermatologic lesions, contact with HBsAg-contaminated surfaces). HBV
transmission rates to susceptible household contacts of chronically
infected persons have varied (range: 14%--60%) (65,66). High rates
of infection also have been reported among unvaccinated long-term
residents of institutions for the mentally handicapped (67,68),
and, in rare instances, person-to-person transmission has been reported in
child care settings (69,70).
Incidence
During 1990--2004, overall incidence of reported acute hepatitis B
declined 75%, from 8.5 to 2.1 per 100,000 population. The most dramatic
declines occurred in the cohort of children to whom recommendations for
routine infant and adolescent vaccination have applied. Incidence among
children aged <12 years and adolescents aged 12--19 years declined 94%,
from 1.1 to 0.36 and 6.1 to 2.8 per 100,000 population, respectively (Figure
2). Since implementation of routine childhood immunization, an
estimated 6,800 perinatal infections and an additional 18,700 infections
during the first 10 years of life have been prevented annually in the
United States (71).
Although infections in infants and children aged <10 years
represented <10% of all HBV infections before implementation of
childhood immunization programs, childhood infections resulted in an
estimated 30%--40% of the chronic HBV infections among persons who
acquired their infections in the United States (1). In two
population-based studies conducted among Asian/Pacific Islander children
who were born in the United States before perinatal hepatitis B prevention
programs were widely implemented, 61%--66% of the chronic HBV infections
occurred in children born to HBsAg-negative mothers (72,73). A
substantial proportion of these chronic infections would not have been
prevented by a selective program of identification and immunization of
only infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers.
In addition to declines in incidence among all age groups, racial
disparities in hepatitis B incidence among children have been
substantially reduced (Figure
3). The reduction of the disparity between Asian/Pacific Islander and
other children is consistent with recent observations noting a decline in
seroprevalence of HBV infection after successful implementation of routine
hepatitis B vaccination among Asians who have recently immigrated to the
United States (74,75). However, as hepatitis B incidence has
declined among U.S.-born children, unvaccinated foreign-born children
account for a high proportion of infections. During 2001--2002, of 19
children born after 1991 in whom acute hepatitis B had been verified,
eight (42%) were foreign born (76).
Prevalence
In the U.S. population, the overall age-adjusted prevalence of HBV
infection (including persons with chronic infection and those with
previous infection) was 4.9% in the third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III, 1988--1994) (77). Foreign-born
persons (particularly Asian/Pacific Islanders) who have emigrated from
countries in which HBV is endemic (Figure
1 and Box
2) contribute disproportionately to the burden of chronic HBV
infection in the United States. The prevalence of chronic HBV infection
among foreign-born persons immigrating to the United States from Central
and Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa varies (range: 5%--15%)
and reflects the patterns of HBV infection in the countries and regions of
origin for these persons. During 1994--2003, approximately 40,000
immigrants with chronic HBV infection were admitted annually to the United
States for permanent residence (78; CDC, unpublished data, 2005).
Prophylaxis
Against HBV Infection
Hepatitis B Vaccine
HBsAg is the antigen used for hepatitis B vaccination (79,80).
Vaccine antigen can be purified from the plasma of persons with chronic
HBV infection or produced by recombinant DNA technology. Vaccines
available in the United States use recombinant DNA technology to express
HBsAg in yeast, which is then purified from the cells by biochemical and
biophysical separation techniques (81,82). Hepatitis B vaccines
licensed in the United States are formulated to contain 10--40 µg
of HBsAg protein/mL. Since March 2000, hepatitis B vaccines produced for
distribution in the United States do not contain thimerosal as a
preservative or contain only a trace amount (<1.0 mcg mercury/mL) from
the manufacturing process (83,84).
Hepatitis B vaccine is available as a single-antigen formulation and
also in fixed combination with other vaccines. Two single-antigen vaccines
are available in the United States: Recombivax HB® (Merck &
Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, New Jersey) and Engerix-B®
(GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Rixensart, Belgium). Of the three licensed
combination vaccines, one (Twinrix® [GlaxoSmithKline
Biologicals, Rixensart, Belgium]) is used for vaccination of adults, and
two (Comvax® [Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, New
Jersey] and Pediarix® [GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Rixensart,
Belgium]) are used for vaccination of infants and young children. Twinrix
contains recombinant HBsAg and inactivated hepatitis A virus. Comvax
contains recombinant HBsAg and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)
polyribosylribitol phosphate conjugated to Neisseria meningitidis
outer membrane protein complex. Pediarix contains recombinant HBsAg,
diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis adsorbed (DTaP),
and inactivated poliovirus (IPV).
HBIG
HBIG provides passively acquired anti-HBs and temporary protection
(i.e., 3--6 months) when administered in standard doses. HBIG is typically
used as an adjunct to hepatitis B vaccine for postexposure
immunoprophylaxis to prevent HBV infection. HBIG administered alone is the
primary means of protection after an HBV exposure for nonresponders to
hepatitis B vaccination.
HBIG is prepared from the plasma of donors with high concentrations of
anti-HBs. The plasma is screened to eliminate donors who are positive for
HBsAg, antibodies to HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV), and HCV RNA. In
addition, proper manufacturing techniques for HBIG inactivate viruses
(e.g., HBV, HCV, and HIV) from the final product (85,86).
No evidence exists that HBV, HCV, or HIV ever has been transmitted by HBIG
commercially available in the United States. HBIG that is commercially
available in the United States does not contain thimerosal.
Vaccination Schedules and Results
of Vaccination
Preexposure Vaccination
Infants and Children
Primary vaccination consists of >3 intramuscular doses of
hepatitis B vaccine (Table
2). Vaccine schedules for infants and children (Tables
3--5)
are determined on the basis of immunogenicity data and the need to
integrate hepatitis B vaccine into a harmonized childhood vaccination
schedule. Although not all possible schedules for each product have been
evaluated in clinical trials, available licensed formulations for both
single-antigen vaccines produce high (>95%) levels of seroprotection
among infants and children when administered in multiple schedules
(87--91).
The immunogenicity of the combined hepatitis B-Hib conjugate vaccine
(Comvax) and the combined hepatitis B-DTaP-IPV vaccine (Pediarix) is
equivalent to that of their individual antigens administered separately.
However, these vaccines cannot be administered to infants aged <6
weeks; only single-antigen hepatitis B vaccine may be used for the birth
dose. Use of 4-dose hepatitis B vaccine schedules, including schedules
with a birth dose, has not increased vaccine reactogenicity
(92,93). Anti-HBs responses after a 3-dose series of hepatitis
B-containing combination vaccines among infants who were previously
vaccinated at birth with single-antigen hepatitis B vaccine are comparable
to those observed after a 3-dose series of combination vaccine without a
birth dose (93).
Birth Dose
Hepatitis B vaccine can be administered soon after birth with only
minimal decrease in immunogenicity, compared with administration at older
ages, and no decrease in protective efficacy (87). Administration
of a birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine is required for effective
postexposure immuno-prophylaxis to prevent perinatal HBV infection.
Although infants who require postexposure immunoprophylaxis should be
identified by maternal HBsAg testing, administering a birth dose to
infants even without HBIG serves as a "safety net" to prevent perinatal
infection among infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers who are not
identified because of errors in maternal HBsAg testing or failures in
reporting of test results (13). The birth dose also provides early
protection to infants at risk for infection after the perinatal period.
Administration of a birth dose has been associated with higher rates of
on-time completion of the hepatitis B vaccine series (15,94). In
certain populations, the birth dose has been associated with improved
completion rates for all other infant vaccines (95), although
findings have not been consistent (15,94).
Adolescents
Recommended vaccination schedules for adolescents balance available
immunogenicity data with the need to achieve compliance with vaccination
in this age group (Tables
2 and 5).
Both licensed single-antigen hepatitis B vaccines administered
intramuscularly at 0, 1, and 6 months produce a >95% sero-protection
rate in adolescents. Equivalent seroprotection rates are achieved among
adolescents vaccinated at 0, 1--2, and 4 months and 0, 12, and 24 months.
The adult (10 µg) dose of Recombivax-HB administered in a 2-dose
schedule to children and adolescents aged 11--15 years at 0 and 4--6
months produces antibody levels equivalent to those obtained with the
5-µg dose administered on a 3-dose schedule (96,97).
However, no data on long-term antibody persistence or protection are
available for 2-dose schedules. No combination vaccines containing
hepatitis B vaccine antigen are approved for use in adolescents aged
11--17 years.
Nonstandard Vaccine Schedules
No apparent effect on immunogenicity has been documented when minimum
spacing of doses is not achieved precisely. Increasing the interval
between the first 2 doses has little effect on immunogenicity or final
antibody concentration (98--100). The third dose confers the
maximum level of seroprotection but acts primarily as a booster and
appears to provide optimal long-term protection (101). Longer
intervals between the last 2 doses result in higher final antibody levels
but might increase the risk for acquisition of HBV infection among persons
who have a delayed response to vaccination. No differences in
immunogenicity have been observed when 1 or 2 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
produced by one manufacturer are followed by doses from a different
manufacturer (102).
Response to Revaccination
A study of infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers who did not respond
to a primary vaccine series indicated that all those not infected with HBV
responded satisfactorily to a repeat 3-dose revaccination series
(103). No data suggest that children who have no detectable
antibody after 6 doses of vaccine would benefit from additional doses.
Groups Requiring Different Vaccination Doses or Schedules
Preterm infants. Preterm infants weighing <2,000 g at birth
have a decreased response to hepatitis B vaccine administered before age 1
month (104--106). By age 1 month, medically stable preterm infants,
regardless of initial birth weight or gestational age, have a response to
vaccination that is comparable to that of full-term infants
(107--110).
Hemodialysis patients and other immunocompromised persons.
Although data concerning the response of pediatric hemodialysis patients
to vaccination with standard pediatric doses are lacking, protective
levels of antibody occur in 75%--97% of those who receive higher dosages
(20-µg) on either the 3- or the 4-dose schedule (111--114).
Humoral response to hepatitis B vaccination is also reduced in other
children and adolescents who are immunocompromised (e.g., hematopoietic
stem cell transplant recipients, patients undergoing chemotherapy, and
HIV-infected persons) (115--119). Modified dosing regimens,
including a doubling of the standard antigen dose or administration of
additional doses, might increase response rates (120). However,
data on response to these alternative vaccination schedules are limited
(121).
Immune Memory
Anti-HBs is the only easily measurable correlate of vaccine-induced
protection. Immunocompetent persons who achieve anti-HBs concentrations
>10 mIU/mL after preexposure vaccination have virtually complete
protection against both acute disease and chronic infection even if
anti-HBs concentrations subsequently decline to <10 mIU/mL
(122--125). Although immunogenicity is lower among
immunocompromised persons, those who achieve and maintain a protective
antibody response before exposure to HBV have a high level of protection
from infection.
After primary immunization with hepatitis B vaccine, anti-HBs
concentrations decline rapidly within the first year and more slowly
thereafter. Among children who respond to a primary vaccine series with
antibody levels >10 mIU/mL, 15%--50% have low or undetectable
concentrations of anti-HBs (anti-HBs loss) 5--15 years after vaccination
(126--130). The persistence of detectable anti-HBs after
vaccination, in the absence of exposure to HBV, depends on the level of
postvaccination antibody concentration.
Despite declines in anti-HBs to <10 mIU/mL, nearly all vaccinated
persons are still protected against HBV infection. The mechanism for
continued vaccine-induced protection is thought to be the preservation of
immune memory through selective expansion and differentiation of clones of
antigen-specific B and T lymphocytes (131). Persistence of
vaccine-induced immune memory among persons who responded to a primary
childhood vaccine series 13--23 years earlier but then had levels of
anti-HBs below 10 mIU/mL has been demonstrated by an anamnestic increase
in anti-HBs levels in 67%--76% of these persons 2--4 weeks after
administration of an additional vaccine dose (132,133). Although
direct measurement of immune memory is not yet possible, these data
indicate that a high proportion of vaccine recipients retain immune memory
and would develop an anti-HBs response upon exposure to HBV.
Studies of cohorts of immunocompetent persons vaccinated as children or
infants also indicate that, despite anti-HBs loss years after
immunization, nearly all vaccinated persons who respond to a primary
series remain protected from HBV infection. No clinical cases of hepatitis
B have been observed in follow-up studies conducted 15--20 years after
vaccination among immunocompetent vaccinated persons with antibody levels
>10 mIU/mL. Certain studies have documented breakthrough
infections (detected by the presence of anti-HBc or HBV DNA) in a limited
percentage of vaccinated persons (130,131), but these infections
are usually transient and asymptomatic; chronic infections have been
documented only rarely (134). Breakthrough infections resulting in
chronic infection have been observed only among vaccinated infants born to
HBsAg-positive women.
Limited data are available on the duration of immune memory after
hepatitis B vaccination in immunocompromised persons (e.g., HIV-infected
patients, dialysis patients, patients undergoing chemotherapy, or
hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients). No clinically important HBV
infections have been documented among immunocompromised persons who
maintain protective levels of anti-HBs. In studies of long-term protection
among HIV-infected persons, breakthrough infections occurring after a
decline in anti-HBs concentrations to <10 mIU/mL have been transient
and asymptomatic (135). However, among hemodialysis patients
who respond to the vaccine, clinically significant HBV infection has been
documented in persons who have not maintained anti-HBs concentrations of
>10 mIU/mL (136).
Postexposure Prophylaxis
Both passive-active postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) with HBIG and
hepatitis B vaccine and active PEP with hepatitis B vaccine alone have
been demonstrated to be highly effective in preventing transmission after
exposure to HBV (137--140). HBIG alone has also been demonstrated
to be effective in preventing HBV transmission (141--144), but with
the availability of hepatitis B vaccine, HBIG typically is used as an
adjunct to vaccination.
The major determinant of the effectiveness of PEP is early
administration of the initial dose of vaccine. The effectiveness of PEP
diminishes the longer it is initiated after exposure (17,145,146).
Studies are limited on the maximum interval after exposure during which
PEP is effective, but the interval is unlikely to exceed 7 days for
perinatal (147) and needlestick (140--142) exposures and 14
days for sexual exposures (122, 138,139,143,144).
No data are available on the efficacy of HBsAg-containing combination
vaccines when used to complete the vaccine series for PEP, but the
efficacy of combination vaccines is expected to be similar to that of
single-antigen vaccines because the HBsAg component induces a comparable
anti-HBs response.
Perinatal HBV Exposure
Passive-active PEP. PEP with hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG
administered 12--24 hours after birth, followed by completion of a 3-dose
vaccine series, has been demonstrated to be 85%--95% effective in
preventing acute and chronic HBV infection in infants born to women who
are positive for both HBsAg and HBeAg (137). Although clinical
trials have evaluated the efficacy of passive-active PEP with hepatitis B
vaccine and HBIG administered only within 24 hours of birth, studies of
passive immunoprophylaxis have demonstrated that HBIG provided protection
when administered as late as 72 hours after exposure. The majority of
clinical trials have evaluated the efficacy of passive-active PEP when the
second vaccine dose was administered at age 1 month (137).
Administration of HBIG plus vaccine at birth, 1 month, and 6 months and at
birth, 2 months, and 6 months has demonstrated comparable efficacy in
prevention of acute and chronic infection among infants born to women who
were both HBsAg and HBeAg positive (Cladd E. Stevens, MD, New York Blood
Center, personal communication, 1994).
Infants born to HBsAg-positive/HBeAg-negative mothers who receive
passive-active PEP with HBIG and hepatitis B vaccine should have the same
high degree of protection as infants born to women who are HBsAg
positive/HBeAg positive. However, the efficacy of this regimen has not
been examined in controlled clinical trials because the low infection rate
would require an unattainable sample size.
Active PEP. Active PEP with hepatitis B vaccine alone (i.e.,
without HBIG) is frequently used in certain remote areas (e.g., Alaska and
the Pacific Islands) where implementation of maternal HBsAg testing is
difficult because no access exists to a laboratory. In randomized,
placebo-controlled clinical trials, administration of hepatitis B vaccine
in a 3- or 4-dose schedule without HBIG beginning <12 hours
after birth has been demonstrated to prevent 70%--95% of perinatal HBV
infections among infants born to women who are positive for both HBsAg and
HBeAg (58,148--152). Population-based studies in areas with a high
endemicity of HBV infection have demonstrated that active postexposure
vaccination is highly effective in preventing infection when the first
dose is administered soon after birth, the second at age 1--2 months, and
the third at age 6--8 months (153--155).
Vaccine Safety
Hepatitis B vaccines have been demonstrated to be safe when
administered to infants, children, adolescents, and adults. Since 1982, an
estimated >60 million adolescents and adults and >40 million infants
and children have been vaccinated in the United States.
Vaccine Reactogenicity
The most frequently reported side effects among persons receiving
hepatitis B vaccine are pain at the injection site (3%--29%) and fever
>99.9° F (>37.7° C) (1%--6%) (156,157). However, in
placebo-controlled studies, these side effects were reported no more
frequently among persons receiving hepatitis B vaccine than among persons
receiving placebo (87). Administration of hepatitis B vaccine soon
after birth has not been associated with an increased rate of elevated
temperatures or microbiologic evaluations for possible sepsis in the first
21 days of life (158).
Adverse Events
A causal association has been established between receipt of hepatitis
B vaccine and anaphylaxis (159). On the basis of data from the
Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) project, the estimated incidence of
anaphylaxis among children and adolescents who received hepatitis B
vaccine is one case per 1.1 million vaccine doses distributed (95%
confidence interval = 0.1--3.9) (160).
Early postlicensure surveillance of adverse events suggested a possible
association between Guillain-Barré syndrome and receipt of the first dose
of plasma-derived hepatitis B vaccine among U.S. adults (161).
However, in a subsequent analysis of Guillain-Barré syndrome cases
reported to CDC, FDA, and vaccine manufacturers, among an estimated 2.5
million adults who received >1 dose of recombinant hepatitis B
vaccine during 1986--1990, the rate of Guillain-Barré syndrome occurring
after hepatitis B vaccination did not exceed the background rate among
unvaccinated persons (CDC, unpublished data, 1992). A review by persons
with clinical expertise concluded that evidence was insufficient to reject
or accept a causal association between Guillain-Barré syndrome and
hepatitis B vaccination (159,162).
Multiple sclerosis (MS) has not been reported after hepatitis B
vaccination among children. However, one retrospective case-control study
(163,164) reported an association between hepatitis B vaccine and
MS among adults. Multiple other studies (165--168) have
demonstrated no association between hepatitis B vaccine and MS. Reviews of
these data by panels of persons with clinical expertise have favored
rejection of a causal association between hepatitis B vaccination and MS
(169,170).
Chronic illnesses that have been reported in rare instances after
hepatitis B vaccination include chronic fatigue syndrome (171),
neurologic disorders (e.g., leukoencephalitis, optic neuritis, and
transverse myelitis) (172--174), rheumatoid arthritis
(175,176), type 1 diabetes (177), and autoimmune disease
(178). No evidence of a causal association between these conditions
or other chronic illnesses and hepatitis B vaccine has been demonstrated
(159,169,170,179--182).
Reported episodes of alopecia (hair loss) after rechallenge with
hepatitis B vaccine suggest that vaccination might, in rare cases, trigger
episodes of alopecia (183). However, a population-based study
determined no statistically significant association between alopecia and
hepatitis B vaccine (184).
No evidence exists of a causal association between hepatitis B
vaccination, including administration of the birth dose, and sudden infant
death syndrome (SIDS) or other causes of death during the first year of
life (185--187). Infant death rates, including rates of SIDS,
declined substantially in the United States during the 1990s, coincident
with an increase in infant hepatitis B vaccination coverage from <1% to
>90% and implementation of efforts to reduce SIDS through infant sleep
positioning and separation from other persons in bed (188).
The safety of hepatitis B vaccine and other vaccines is assessed
continuously through ongoing monitoring of data from VSD, the Vaccine
Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS), and other surveillance systems.
Any adverse events after vaccination should be reported to VAERS; report
forms and assistance are available from CDC at telephone 1-800-822-7967 or
at http://www.vaers.hhs.gov/.
Contraindications and Precautions
Hepatitis B vaccination is contraindicated for persons with a history
of hypersensitivity to yeast or to any vaccine component
(92,189--191). Despite a theoretic risk for allergic reaction to
vaccination in persons with allergy to Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(baker's yeast), no evidence exists that documents adverse reactions after
vaccination of persons with a history of yeast allergy.
Persons with a history of serious adverse events (e.g., anaphylaxis)
after receipt of hepatitis B vaccine should not receive additional doses.
As with other vaccines, vaccination of persons with moderate or severe
acute illness, with or without fever, should be deferred until the acute
phase of the illness resolves (192).
Vaccination is not contraindicated in persons with a history of MS,
Guillain-Barré syndrome, autoimmune disease (e.g., systemic lupus
erythematosis or rheumatoid arthritis), or other chronic diseases.
Pregnancy is not a contraindication to vaccination. Limited data
indicate no apparent risk for adverse events to developing fetuses when
hepatitis B vaccine is administered to pregnant women (193).
Current vaccines contain noninfectious HBsAg and should cause no risk to
the fetus.
Future Considerations
Implementation of the recommendations and strategies in this document
should ultimately lead to the elimination of HBV transmission in the
United States. New information will have implications for this effort, and
adjustments and changes are expected to occur.
Long-Term Protection and Booster Doses
Studies are needed to assess long-term protection after vaccination and
the possible need for booster doses of vaccine. The longest follow-up
studies of vaccine protection have been conducted in populations with an
initially high endemicity of HBV infection (i.e., >8% prevalence
of chronic infection) (130). Implementation of hepatitis B
vaccination programs in populations with a high endemicity of HBV
infection has resulted in virtual elimination of new HBV infections by
providing vaccine-induced immunity to susceptible persons. In these
populations, ongoing exposure of vaccinated persons to persons with
chronic HBV infection might complicate future efforts to assess long-term
hepatitis B vaccine efficacy. Assessment of efficacy provided by hepatitis
B immunization after 15--20 years will require studies among populations
that continue to have exposures to HBsAg-positive persons (e.g.,
communities of immigrants from highly endemic countries, populations of
injection-drug users, or health-care workers) and studies among
populations with a low prevalence of infection.
Immunization Escape Mutants
Mutations in the S gene of HBV can lead to conformational changes in
the a determinant of the HBsAg protein, which is the major target
for neutralizing anti-HBs. These variants have been detected in humans
infected with HBV, and concern has been expressed that these variants
might replicate in the presence of vaccine-induced anti-HBs or anti-HBs
contained in HBIG (194,195). Although no evidence suggests
that S gene immunization escape mutants pose a threat to existing programs
using hepatitis B vaccines (196), further studies and enhanced
surveillance to detect the emergence of these variants are high priorities
for monitoring the effectiveness of current vaccination strategies.
Recommendations for Hepatitis B
Vaccination of Infants, Children, and Adolescents
This section outlines updated ACIP recommendations and associated
implementation strategies for hepatitis B vaccination of infants,
children, and adolescents. These recommendations have been summarized (Box
3).
Prevention of Perinatal HBV Infection and Management of Pregnant
Women
Recommendations
Prenatal HBsAg Testing
- All pregnant women should be tested routinely for HBsAg during an
early prenatal visit (e.g., first trimester) in each pregnancy, even if
they have been previously vaccinated or tested.
- Women who were not screened prenatally, those who engage in
behaviors that put them at high risk for infection (e.g., injection-drug
use, having had more than one sex partner in the previous 6 months or an
HBsAg-positive sex partner, evaluation or treatment for a sexually
transmitted disease [STD], or recent or current injection-drug use) and
those with clinical hepatitis should be tested at the time of admission
to the hospital for delivery.
- All laboratories that provide HBsAg testing of pregnant women should
use an FDA-licensed or -approved HBsAg test and should perform testing
according to the manufacturer's labeling, including testing of initially
reactive specimens with a licensed neutralizing confirmatory test. When
pregnant women are tested for HBsAg at the time of admission for
delivery, shortened testing protocols may be used and initially reactive
results reported to expedite administration of immunoprophylaxis to
infants.
- Women who are HBsAg positive should be referred to an appropriate
case-management program to ensure that their infants receive timely
postexposure prophylaxis and follow-up (see Case-Management Programs to
Prevent Perinatal HBV Infection). In addition, a copy of the original
laboratory report indicating the pregnant woman's HBsAg status should be
provided to the hospital where delivery is planned and to the
health-care provider who will care for the newborn.
- Women who are HBsAg positive should be provided with or referred for
appropriate counseling and medical management (Appendix
A). HBsAg-positive pregnant women should receive information
concerning hepatitis B that discusses
--- modes of transmission;
--- perinatal concerns (e.g., infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers
may be breast fed); --- prevention of HBV transmission to contacts,
including the importance of postexposure prophylaxis for the newborn
infant and hepatitis B vaccination for household, sexual, and
needle-sharing contacts; --- substance abuse treatment, if
appropriate; and --- medical evaluation and possible treatment of
chronic hepatitis B.
- When HBsAg testing of pregnant women is not feasible (i.e., in
remote areas without access to a laboratory), all infants should receive
hepatitis B vaccine <12 hours of birth and should complete the
hepatitis B vaccine series according to a recommended schedule for
infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers (Tables
2 and 3).
Management of Infants Born to Women Who Are HBsAg Positive
- All infants born to HBsAg-positive women should receive
single-antigen hepatitis B vaccine (Table
2) and HBIG (0.5 mL) <12 hours of birth, administered at
different injection sites. The vaccine series should be completed
according to a recommended schedule for infants born to HBsAg-positive
mothers (Table
3). The final dose in the vaccine series should not be administered
before age 24 weeks (164 days).
- For preterm infants weighing <2,000 g, the initial vaccine dose
(birth dose) should not be counted as part of the vaccine series because
of the potentially reduced immunogenicity of hepatitis B vaccine in
these infants; 3 additional doses of vaccine (for a total of 4 doses)
should be administered beginning when the infant reaches age 1 month (Tables
3 and 4).
- Postvaccination testing for anti-HBs and HBsAg should be performed
after completion of the vaccine series, at age 9--18 months (generally
at the next well-child visit). Testing should not be performed before
age 9 months to avoid detection of anti-HBs from HBIG administered
during infancy and to maximize the likelihood of detecting late HBV
infection. Anti-HBc testing of infants is not recommended because
passively acquired maternal anti-HBc might be detected in infants born
to HBV-infected mothers to age 24 months.
--- HBsAg-negative infants
with anti-HBs levels >10 mIU/mL are protected and need no
further medical management. --- HBsAg-negative infants with anti-HBs
levels <10 mIU/mL should be revaccinated with a second 3-dose series
and retested 1--2 months after the final dose of vaccine. ---
Infants who are HBsAg positive should receive appropriate follow-up (Appendix
A).
- Infants of HBsAg-positive mothers may be breast fed beginning
immediately after birth.
- Although not indicated in the manufacturer's package labeling,
HBsAg-containing combination vaccines may be used for infants aged
>6 weeks born to HBsAg-positive mothers to complete the
vaccine series after receipt of a birth dose of single-antigen hepatitis
B vaccine and HBIG.
Management of Infants Born to Women with Unknown HBsAg Status
- Women admitted for delivery without documentation of HBsAg test
results should have blood drawn and tested as soon as possible after
admission.
- While test results are pending, all infants born to women without
documentation of HBsAg test results should receive the first dose of
single-antigen hepatitis B vaccine (without HBIG) <12 hours of
birth (Tables
2 and 3).
--- If the mother is determined to be HBsAg positive, her infant
should receive HBIG as soon as possible but no later than age 7 days,
and the vaccine series should be completed according to a recommended
schedule for infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers (Table
3). --- If the mother is determined to be HBsAg negative, the
vaccine series should be completed according to a recommended schedule
for infants born to HBsAg-negative mothers (Table
3). --- If the mother has never been tested to determine her
HBsAg status, the vaccine series should be completed according to a
recommended schedule for infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers (Table
3). Administration of HBIG is not necessary for these infants.
- Because of the potentially decreased immunogenicity of vaccine in
preterm infants weighing <2,000 g, these infants should receive both
single-antigen hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG (0.5 mL) if the mother's
HBsAg status cannot be determined <12 hours of birth. The
birth dose of vaccine should not be counted as part of the 3 doses
required to complete the vaccine series; 3 additional doses of vaccine
(for a total of 4 doses) should be administered according to a
recommended schedule on the basis of the mother's HBsAg test result (Table
3).
Vaccination of Pregnant Women
- Pregnant women who are identified as being at risk for HBV infection
during pregnancy (e.g., having more than one sex partner during the
previous 6 months, been evaluated or treated for an STD, recent or
current injection-drug use, or having had an HBsAg-positive sex partner)
should be vaccinated.
- Pregnant women at risk for HBV infection during pregnancy should be
counseled concerning other methods to prevent HBV infection.
Implementation
Delivery Hospital Policies and Procedures
- All delivery hospitals should implement policies and procedures (Box
4) to ensure 1) identification of infants born to HBsAg-positive
mothers and infants born to mothers with unknown HBsAg status (see
Prenatal HBsAg Testing), and 2) initiation of immunization for these
infants. Such policies and procedures should include the following
standing orders:
--- for all pregnant women, review of HBsAg test
results at the time of admission for delivery; --- for women who do
not have a documented HBsAg test result, HBsAg testing as soon as
possible after admission for delivery; --- identification and
management of all infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers; ---
identification and management of all infants born to mothers with
unknown HBsAg status; and --- for all infants, documentation on the
infant's medical record of maternal HBsAg test results, infant hepatitis
B vaccine administration, and administration of HBIG (if appropriate).
- Delivery hospitals should enroll in the federally funded Vaccines
for Children (VFC) program to obtain free hepatitis B vaccine for
administration of the birth dose to newborns who are eligible (i.e.,
Medicaid eligible, American Indian or Alaska Native, underinsured, or
uninsured).
Case-Management Programs to Prevent Perinatal HBV Infection
- States and localities should establish case-management programs (Box
5), including appropriate policies, procedures, laws, and
regulations, to ensure that
--- all pregnant women are tested for
HBsAg during each pregnancy, and --- infants born to HBsAg-positive
women and infants born to women with unknown HBsAg status receive
recommended case management.
- The location of these programs and the methods by which they operate
will depend on multiple factors (e.g., population density and annual
caseload of HBsAg-positive women). Programs may be located in state or
local health departments, private health-care systems (e.g., health
maintenance organizations), or institutions (e.g., correctional facility
systems). Program administrators will need to work with prenatal care
providers, delivery hospital staff, pediatric care providers, private
health-care systems, and health departments.
Universal
Vaccination of Infants
Recommendations
- All infants should receive the hepatitis B vaccine series as part of
the recommended childhood immunization schedule (Table
5 and Appendix
B). (For recommendations on management of infants born to
HBsAg-positive mothers and infants born to mothers with unknown HBsAg
status, see Prevention of Perinatal HBV Infection and Management of
Pregnant Women.)
- For all medically stable infants weighing >2,000 g at
birth and born to HBsAg-negative mothers, the first dose of vaccine
should be administered before hospital discharge. Only single-antigen
hepatitis B vaccine should be used for the birth dose.
- On a case-by-case basis and only in rare circumstances, the first
dose may be delayed until after hospital discharge for an infant who
weighs >2,000 g and whose mother is HBsAg negative.
---
When such a decision is made, a physician's order to withhold the birth
dose and a copy of the original laboratory report indicating that the
mother was HBsAg negative during this pregnancy should be placed in the
infant's medical record. --- For infants who do not receive a first
dose before hospital discharge, the first dose should be administered no
later than age 2 months. --- Situations in which the birth dose
should not be delayed include any high-risk sexual or drug-using
practices of the infant's mother during pregnancy (e.g., having had more
than one sex partner during the previous 6 months or an HBsAg-positive
sex partner, evaluation or treatment for an STD, or recent or current
injection-drug use) and expected poor compliance with follow-up to
initiate the vaccine series.
- Preterm infants weighing <2,000 g and born to HBsAg-negative
mothers should have their first vaccine dose delayed until 1 month after
birth or hospital discharge (Table
4). For these infants, a copy of the original laboratory report
indicating that the mother was HBsAg negative during this pregnancy
should be placed in the infant's medical record.
- The vaccine series should be completed according to a recommended
schedule with either single-antigen vaccine or a combination vaccine
that contains the hepatitis B vaccine antigen (e.g., Hib-hepatitis B or
DTaP-IPV-hepatitis B) (Table
2). The final dose in the vaccine series should not be administered
before age 24 weeks (164 days).
- Administration of 4 doses of hepatitis B vaccine to infants is
permissible in certain situations (e.g., when combination vaccines are
administered after the birth dose).
- In populations with currently or previously high rates of childhood
HBV infection (i.e., Alaska Natives; Pacific Islanders; and immigrant
families from Asia, Africa, and other regions with intermediate or high
endemic rates of infection [Figure
1 and Box
2]), the first dose of hepatitis B vaccine should be administered at
birth and the final dose at age 6--12 months.
Implementation
- All delivery hospitals should implement standing orders for
administration of hepatitis B vaccination as part of routine medical
care of all medically stable infants weighing >2,000 g at
birth (Box
4).
- All delivery hospitals should implement policies and procedures for
management of infants weighing <2,000 g at birth, including the
following:
--- ensuring initiation of postexposure immunization of
infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers and infants born to mothers not
screened for HBsAg prenatally (see Prevention of Perinatal HBV Infection
and Management of Pregnant Women), and --- documentation of maternal
HBsAg test results on the infant's medical record.
- Prenatal care education should include information regarding the
rationale for and importance of newborn hepatitis B vaccination.
- States are encouraged to adopt regulations or laws that require
hepatitis B vaccination for entry into child care and also for entry
into kindergarten and/or elementary school to ensure high vaccine
coverage among infants and children.
Vaccination of
Children and Adolescents Who Were Not Previously Vaccinated
Recommendations
- Hepatitis B vaccination is recommended for all children and
adolescents aged <19 years.
- Children and adolescents who have not previously received hepatitis
B vaccine should be vaccinated routinely at any age with an appropriate
dose and schedule (Tables
2 and 5).
Selection of a vaccine schedule should consider the need to achieve
completion of the vaccine series. In all settings, vaccination should be
initiated even though completion of the vaccine series might not be
ensured.
Implementation
- To ensure high vaccination coverage among children and adolescents,
the following measures are recommended:
--- All children aged 11--12
years should have a review of their immunization records and should
complete the vaccine series if they were not previously vaccinated or
were incompletely vaccinated. --- All children and adolescents aged
<19 years (including internationally adopted children) who were born
in Asia, the Pacific Islands, Africa, or other intermediate- or
high-endemic countries (Figure
1 and Box
2) or who have at least one parent who was born in one of these
areas should have a review of their immunization records and should
complete the vaccine series if they were not previously vaccinated or
were incompletely vaccinated. --- States are encouraged to adopt
regulations or laws that require hepatitis B vaccination before entry
into middle school or its equivalent. --- Vaccination requirements
should be considered for older high school students and for students
before college entry, when feasible. --- States are encouraged to
expand or implement immunization registries to include adolescents.
--- Hepatitis B vaccine should be offered to all unvaccinated
adolescents in settings that provide health-care services to this age
group (Box
6), particularly those who engage in behaviors that place them at
high risk for HBV infection.
Acknowledgments
Review of this report was provided by the following persons: R. Palmer
Beasley, MD, School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Houston, Texas; F. Blaine Hollinger, MD, Baylor College
of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Neal A. Halsey, MD, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore,
Maryland; and Craig N. Shapiro, MD, Office of Global Health Affairs, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC. Allison
Greenspan, MPH, Division of Viral Hepatitis, National Center for
Infectious Diseases, CDC, provided vital assistance in the preparation of
this report.
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Glossary
Terms and Abbreviations Used in This Report
| ACIP |
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices |
| ALT |
alanine aminotransferase |
| Anti-HBc |
antibody to hepatitis B core antigen |
| Anti-HBe |
antibody to hepatitis B e antigen |
| Anti-HBs |
antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen |
| DTaP |
diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis
adsorbed |
| FDA |
Food and Drug Administration |
| HBcAg |
hepatitis B core antigen |
| HBeAg |
hepatitis B e antigen |
| HBIG |
hepatitis B immune globulin |
| HBsAg |
hepatitis B surface antigen |
| HBV |
hepatitis B virus |
| HCC |
hepatocellular carcinoma |
| HCV |
hepatitis C virus |
| Hib |
Haemophilus influenzae type b |
| HIV |
human immunodeficiency virus |
| IgM |
immunoglobulin M |
| IPV |
inactivated poliovirus |
| MS |
multiple sclerosis |
| NHANES |
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey |
| VAERS |
Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System |
| VSD |
Vaccine Safety Datalink |
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
Membership List, June 2005
Chairman: Myron J. Levin, MD, Professor of Pediatrics and
Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado.
Executive Secretary: Larry Pickering, MD, National Immunization
Program, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia.
Members: Jon S. Abramson, MD, Wake Forest University School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Ban Mishu Allos, MD, Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee; Guthrie S. Birkhead,
MD, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York; Judith
Campbell, MD, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Reginald Finger,
MD, Focus on the Family, Colorado Springs, Colorado; Janet Gildsdorf, MD,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Tracy Lieu, MD, Harvard
Pilgrim Health Care and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts;
Edgar Marcuse, MD, Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center,
Seattle, Washington; Julia Morita, MD, Chicago Department of Health,
Chicago, Illinois; Gregory Poland, MD, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine,
Rochester, Minnesota; John B. Salamone, National Italian American
Foundation, Washington, DC; Patricia Stinchfield, Children's Hospital and
Clinics, St. Paul, Minnesota; John J. Treanor, MD, University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York; Robin Womeodu, MD,
University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee.
Ex-Officio Members: James E. Cheek, MD, Indian Health Service,
Albuquerque, New Mexico; Wayne Hachey, DO, Department of Defense, Falls
Church, Virginia; Geoffrey S. Evans, MD, Health Resources and Services
Administration, Rockville, Maryland; Bruce Gellin, MD, National Vaccine
Program Office, Washington, DC; Linda Murphy, Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, Baltimore, Maryland; George T. Curlin, MD, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; Norman Baylor, MD, Food and Drug
Administration, Bethesda, Maryland; Kristin Lee Nichol, MD, Department of
Veterans Affairs, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Liaison Representatives: American Academy of Family Physicians,
Jonathan Temte, MD, Clarence, New York, and Richard Clover, MD,
Louisville, Kentucky; American Academy of Pediatrics, Margaret Rennels,
MD, Baltimore, Maryland, and Carol Baker, MD, Houston, Texas; America's
Health Insurance Plans, Andrea Gelzer, MD, Hartford, Connecticut; American
College Health Association, James C. Turner, MD, Charlottesville,
Virginia; American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Stanley
Gall, MD, Louisville, Kentucky; American College of Physicians, Kathleen
Neuzil, MD, Seattle, Washington; American Medical Association, Litjen Tan,
PhD, Chicago, Illinois; American Pharmacists Association, Stephan L.
Foster, PharmD, Memphis, Tennessee; Association of Teachers of Preventive
Medicine, W. Paul McKinney, MD, Louisville, Kentucky; Biotechnology
Industry Organization, Clement Lewin, PhD, Cambridge, Massachusetts;
Canadian National Advisory Committee on Immunization, Monica Naus, MD,
Vancouver, British Columbia; Health-Care Infection Control Practices
Advisory Committee, Steve Gordon, MD, Cleveland, Ohio; Infectious Diseases
Society of America, Samuel L. Katz, MD, Durham, North Carolina, and
William Schaffner, MD, Nashville, Tennessee; London Department of Health,
David M. Salisbury, MD, London, United Kingdom; National Association of
County and City Health Officials, Nancy Bennett, MD, Rochester, New York;
National Coalition for Adult Immunization, David A. Neumann, PhD,
Bethesda, Maryland; National Immunization Council and Child Health
Program, Mexico, Romeo Rodriguez, Mexico City, Mexico; National Medical
Association, Dennis A. Brooks, MD, Baltimore, Maryland; National Vaccine
Advisory Committee, Charles Helms, MD, PhD, Iowa City, Iowa;
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, Damian A. Braga,
Swiftwater, Pennsylvania, and Peter Paradiso, PhD, Collegeville,
Pennsylvania; and Society for Adolescent Medicine, Amy Middleman, MD,
Houston, Texas.
ACIP Hepatitis Vaccines Working Group
Chair: Tracy Lieu, MD, Boston, Massachusetts.
Members: Jon Abramson, MD, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Beth
Bell, MD, Atlanta, Georgia; James E. Cheek, MD, Albuquerque, New Mexico;
Anthony Fiore, MD, Atlanta, Georgia; Stephen Feinstone, MD, Bethesda,
Maryland; Robert Frenck, MD, Torrance, California; Stanley Gall, MD,
Louisville, Kentucky; Janet Gildsdorf, MD, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Steve
Gordon, MD, Cleveland, Ohio; Samuel L. Katz, MD, Durham, North Carolina;
Edgar Marcuse, MD, Seattle, Washington; Ban Mishu Allos, MD, Nashville,
Tennessee; Eric Mast, MD, Atlanta, Georgia; Julia Morita, MD, Chicago,
Illinois; William Schaffner, MD, Nashville, Tennessee; Deborah Wexler, MD,
St. Paul, Minnesota. Table 1
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