Abstract

We studied 152 healthy pregnant women and their 156 newborns for markers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in Dakar, Senegal. Of these, 120 mothers (79%) had antibodies to the hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc), 21 (13.8%) were hepatitis B surface antigen (HBs Ag) positive, including 2/21 (9.5%) hepatitis B core-associated antigen (HBe Ag) positive and 1/21 (4.7%) HBV DNA positive. At birth, 11 (7%) infants were HBs Ag positive; 9/11 had an HBs Ag positive mother. Ten of these HBs Ag positive-born infants were investigated at 6-7 months: 5 were strongly HBs Ag positive and developed antibodies to HBs Ag, HBc Ag or HBe Ag; these 5 (3.2% of the total) probably became chronic carriers of HBV. The 5 others were HBs Ag negative and 4/5 did not develop antibodies against HBV Ag; HBs Ag positivity at birth was likely due to contamination of the mother's blood. Thirty-one of the 145 HBs Ag negative-born infants were studied at 6-7 months and remained HBs Ag negative. However, 5 (16%) showed evidence of HBV infection occurring between 0 and 6 months, as shown by the development of antibodies to HBs Ag, HBc Ag, and/or HBe Ag. Despite the low prevalence of HBV DNA and HBe Ag in HBs Ag positive African mothers, this study shows the occurrence of perinatal transmission of HBV in West Africa, in contrast with previous studies. Perinatal HBV transmission could explain the HBV vaccination failure recently reported in children in Senegal.

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