Nearly
20% of New Hepatitis B Infections May Occur in Healthcare Settings
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SUMMARY:
As many as 1 in 5 cases of acute hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection
in the U.S. may be attributable to exposure in healthcare
settings, especially long-term care facilities, according
to research presented last week at the 50th Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC
2010) in Boston. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
To
learn more about routes of hepatitis B transmission, Danni Daniels from
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CD) and colleagues collected
data from surveillance of new HBV infections reported during 2005-2009
by health departments in Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, Oregon, 34
counties in New York State, and New York City. They included case patients
who met clinical and laboratory criteria for infection, being positive
for hepatitis B core antibodies (anti-HBc) or hepatitis B surface antigen
(HBsAg).
Study
sites evaluated the presence of 21 potential HBV risk factors during
the period 6 weeks to 6 months before symptom onset, as well as 2 lifetime
risk factors; people could have more than 1 risk factor.
The researchers
then divided up the risk factors and compared 2 mutually exclusive risk
categories:
1.
Healthcare-associated risks, including chronic hemodialysis (kidney
dialysis), blood transfusion, occupational exposure to blood, percutaneous
injury (e.g., needle stick), infusion, surgery, hospitalization, or
residence in a long-term care facility.
2. Sexual, drug-related, or household contact risks, including
sex, injection drug use, or household contact with a person known or
suspected to be infected with HBV.
Individuals
with both types of risk factors were classified as having healthcare-associated
risk, so the study captured cases that likely could potentially have
been linked to health procedures or facilities, therefore representing
an upper boundary.
Results
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Between
2005 and 2009, a total of 1269 cases of acute hepatitis B were reported
by the 5 states. |
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Of
these, 287 patients, or 22.6%, had no recorded exposure risks and
were excluded from the analysis. |
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Among
the 982 people with available risk information: |
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183
(18.6%) had healthcare-associated risk factors; |
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396
(40.3%) had sex/drug/household exposure risk; |
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253
(25.8%) had no identified exposure risk factors. |
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Patients
with healthcare-associated risk factors were significantly older
than people with sex/drug/household exposure (median 46 vs 39 years)
and more likely to be female (38% vs 23%), but were similar in racial/ethnic
distribution. |
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Out
of 183 healthcare-associated cases, 12 (6.6%) were residents of
long-term care facilities such as nursing homes. |
Based
on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Nearly 1 in 5 acute
hepatitis B cases were identified with possible healthcare-associated
risk. Almost 7% were in long-term care."
The results
"suggest that healthcare-associated risk may represent a measurable
portion of acute hepatitis B cases," they added.
Investigator
affiliations: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA;
Oregon Public Health Div, Portland, OR; Connecticut Dept of Health,
Hartford, CT; New York City Dept of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York,
NY; Colorado Dept of Public Health & Environment, Denver, CO; Minnesota
Dept of Health, St Paul, MN; New York State Dept of Health, Albany,
NY.
9/24/10
Reference
D Daniels, M Klevens, K Iqbal, and others. Measuring Healthcare-Associated
Hepatitis B Virus Transmission: U.S. 2005-09. 50th Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010). Boston, September
12-15, 2010. (Abstract
K-256).
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