Microbiology Topics: Hepatitis B Infection Section 1
Microbiology Topics: Hepatitis B Infection Section 1
Section 1
Dr:Azmi Hawari
Ramzi Zeidan
201910964
201912523
201810206
Aseel Zakarneh
201910579
Hepatitis B :is a potentially life-threatening liver infection
caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). It is a major global health
problem. It can cause chronic infection and puts people at high
risk of death from cirrhosis and liver cancer.
A safe and effective vaccine that offers a 98-100% protection
against hepatitis B is available. Preventing hepatitis B infection
averts the development of complications including the
development of chronic disease and liver cancer.
Geographical distribution:
Hepatitis B prevalence is highest in the WHO Western Pacific
Region and the WHO African Region, where 6.2% and 6.1% of
the adult population is infected respectively. In the WHO
Eastern Mediterranean Region, the WHO South-East Asia
Region and the WHO European Region, an estimated 3.3%,
2.0% and 1.6% of the general population is infected,
respectively. And in the WHO Region of the Americas, 0.7% of
the population is infected.
Transmission:
In highly endemic areas, hepatitis B is most commonly spread
from mother to child at birth (perinatal transmission), or
through horizontal transmission (exposure to infected blood),
especially from an infected child to an uninfected child during
the first 5 years of life. The development of chronic infection is
very common in infants infected from their mothers or before
the age of 5 years.
Hepatitis B is also spread by needlestick injury, tattooing,
piercing and exposure to infected blood and body fluids, such as
saliva and, menstrual, vaginal, and seminal fluids. Sexual
transmission of hepatitis B may occur, particularly in
unvaccinated men who have sex with men and heterosexual
persons with multiple sex partners or contact with sex workers.
Infection in adulthood leads to chronic hepatitis in less than 5%
of cases, whereas infection in infancy and early childhood leads
to chronic hepatitis in about 95% of cases. Transmission of the
virus may also occur through the reuse of needles and syringes
either in health-care settings or among persons who inject
drugs. In addition, infection can occur during medical, surgical
and dental procedures, through tattooing, or through the use of
razors and similar objects that are contaminated with infected
blood.
The hepatitis B virus can survive outside the body for at least 7
days. During this time, the virus can still cause infection if it
enters the body of a person who is not protected by the vaccine.
The incubation period of the hepatitis B virus is 75 days on
average, but can vary from 30 to 180 days. The virus may be
detected within 30 to 60 days after infection and can persist
and develop into chronic hepatitis B.
Symptoms:
Most people do not experience any symptoms when newly
infected. However, some people have acute illness with
symptoms that last several weeks, including yellowing of the
skin and eyes (jaundice), dark urine, extreme fatigue, nausea,
vomiting and abdominal pain. A small subset of persons with
acute hepatitis can develop acute liver failure, which can lead
to death.
In some people, the hepatitis B virus can also cause a chronic
liver infection that can later develop into cirrhosis (a scarring of
the liver) or liver cancer.
HBV-HIV coinfection:
About 1% of persons living with HBV infection (2.7 million
people) are also infected with HIV. Conversely, the global
prevalence of HBV infection in HIV-infected persons is 7.4%.
Since 2015, WHO has recommended treatment for everyone
diagnosed with HIV infection, regardless of the stage of disease.
Tenofovir, which is included in the treatment combinations
recommended as first-line therapy for HIV infection, is also
active against HBV.
Diagnosis:
It is not possible, on clinical grounds, to differentiate hepatitis B
from hepatitis caused by other viral agents, hence, laboratory
confirmation of the diagnosis is essential. A number of blood
tests are available to diagnose and monitor people with
hepatitis B. They can be used to distinguish acute and chronic
infections.
Laboratory diagnosis of hepatitis B infection focuses on the
detection of the hepatitis B surface antigen HBsAg. WHO
recommends that all blood donations be tested for hepatitis B
to ensure blood safety and avoid accidental transmission to
people who receive blood products.
Acute HBV infection is characterized by the presence of HBsAg
and immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibody to the core antigen,
HBcAg. During the initial phase of infection, patients are also
seropositive for hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg). HBeAg is usually
a marker of high levels of replication of the virus. The presence
of HBeAg indicates that the blood and body fluids of the
infected individual are highly infectious.
Chronic infection is characterized by the persistence of HBsAg
for at least 6 months (with or without concurrent HBeAg).
Persistence of HBsAg is the principal marker of risk for
developing chronic liver disease and liver cancer (hepatocellular
carcinoma) later in life.
Treatment:
There is no specific treatment for acute hepatitis B. Therefore,
care is aimed at maintaining comfort and adequate nutritional
balance, including replacement of fluids lost from vomiting and
diarrhoea. Most important is the avoidance of unnecessary
medications. Acetaminophen/Paracetamol and medication
against vomiting should not be given.
Chronic hepatitis B infection can be treated with medicines,
including oral antiviral agents. Treatment can slow the
progression of cirrhosis, reduce incidence of liver cancer and
improve long term survival. Only a proportion (estimates vary
from 10% to 40% depending on setting and eligibility criteria) of
people with chronic hepatitis B infection will require treatment.
WHO recommends the use of oral treatments - tenofovir or
entecavir- as the most potent drugs to suppress hepatitis B
virus. They rarely lead to drug resistance compared with other
drugs, are simple to take (1 pill a day), and have few side
effects, so require only limited monitoring.
Entecavir is off-patent. In 2017, all low- and middle-income
countries could legally procure generic entecavir, but the costs
and availability varied widely. Tenofovir is no longer protected
by a patent anywhere in the world. The median price of WHO-
prequalified generic tenofovir on the international market fell
from US$ 208 per year to US$ 32 per year in 2016.
In most people, however, the treatment does not cure hepatitis
B infection, but only suppresses the replication of the virus.
Therefore, most people who start hepatitis B treatment must
continue it for life.
There is still limited access to diagnosis and treatment of
hepatitis B in many resource-constrained settings. In 2016, of
the more than 250 million people living with HBV infection,
10.5% (27 million) were aware of their infection. Of those
diagnosed, the global treatment coverage is 16.7% (4.5 million).
Many people are diagnosed only when they already have
advanced liver disease.
Among the long-term complications of HBV infections, cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma cause a large disease burden.
Liver cancer progresses rapidly, and since treatment options are
limited, the outcome is generally poor. In low-income settings,
most people with liver cancer die within months of diagnosis. In
high-income countries, surgery and chemotherapy can prolong
life for up to a few years. Liver transplantation is sometimes
used in people with cirrhosis in high income countries, with
varying success.
Prevention
The hepatitis B vaccine is the mainstay of hepatitis B
prevention. WHO recommends that all infants receive the
hepatitis B vaccine as soon as possible after birth, preferably
within 24 hours – followed by two or three doses of hepatitis B
vaccine at least four weeks apart to complete the series. Timely
birth dose is an effective measure to reduce transmission from
mother-to-child.
According to latest WHO estimates, the proportion of children
under five years of age chronically infected with HBV dropped
to just under 1% in 2019 down from around 5% in the pre-
vaccine era ranging from the 1980s to the early 2000s.
This marks the achievement of one of the milestone targets to
eliminate viral hepatitis in the Sustainable Development Goals ─
to reach under 1% prevalence of HBV infections in children
under five years of age by 2020.
The scale-up of hepatitis B vaccine worldwide over the last two
decades has been a great public health success story and
contributed to the decrease in HBV infections among children
In 2019, coverage of 3 doses of the vaccine reached 85%
worldwide compared to around 30% in 2000. However,
coverage of the hepatitis B vaccine birth dose remains uneven.
Global coverage of the HBV birth dose, for example, is 43%,
while coverage in the WHO African Region is only 6%. .
The complete vaccine series induces protective antibody levels
in more than 95% of infants, children and young adults.
Protection lasts at least 20 years and is probably lifelong. Thus,
WHO does not recommend booster vaccinations for persons
who have completed the 3-dose vaccination schedule.
All children and adolescents younger than 18 years and not
previously vaccinated should receive the vaccine if they live in
countries where there is low or intermediate endemicity. In
those settings it is possible that more people in high-risk groups
may acquire the infection and they should also be vaccinated.
This includes:
people who frequently require blood or blood products, dialysis
patients and recipients of solid organ transplantations;
people in prisons;
people who inject drugs;
household and sexual contacts of people with chronic HBV
infection;
people with multiple sexual partners;
healthcare workers and others who may be exposed to blood
and blood products through their work; and
travellers who have not completed their HBV series, who should
be offered the vaccine before leaving for endemic areas.
WHO response:
In May 2016, the World Health Assembly adopted the
first "Global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis, 2016-
2020". The strategy highlights the critical role of universal
health coverage and sets targets that align with those of the
Sustainable Development Goals.
The strategy has a vision to eliminate viral hepatitis as a public
health problem. This is encapsulated in the global targets to
reduce new viral hepatitis infections by 90% and reduce deaths
due to viral hepatitis by 65% by 2030. Actions to be taken by
countries and the WHO Secretariat to reach these targets are
outlined in the strategy.
To support countries in achieving the global hepatitis
elimination targets under the Sustainable Development Agenda
2030, WHO is working to: