Horizontal transmission of hepatitis b virus from mother to child due to immune escape despite immunoprophylaxis

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Abstract

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.

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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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