Hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination starting at birth is approximately 95% effective in preventing mother-To-child transmission to infants born to HBV-infected mothers. A higher risk of transmission is associated with birth to a highly viremic mother, often due to transplacental exposure, while later horizontal transmission is much less common, particularly following complete vaccination. This study reports a case of infection in an older child despite appropriate immunoprophylaxis starting at birth and an apparent protective immune response post-vaccination. Two immune escape mutations within the antigenic determinant of the surface antigen-coding region were observed in the child's dominant HBV sequence, whereas the maternal HBV variant lacked mutations at both sites. Ultra-deep sequencing confirmed the presence of 1 mutation at low levels within the maternal HBV quasispecies population, suggesting early exposure to the child followed by viral evolution resulting in immunoprophylaxis escape and chronic infection.
CITATION STYLE
Kanji, J. N., Penner, R. E. D., Giles, E., Goodison, K., Martin, S. R., Marinier, E., & Osiowy, C. (2019). Horizontal transmission of hepatitis b virus from mother to child due to immune escape despite immunoprophylaxis. Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 68(5), E81–E84. https://doi.org/10.1097/MPG.0000000000002318
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