1. Serosurvey of hepatitis B surface antigen in pregnant Saudi women.
- Author
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Khalil MK, Al-Mazrou YY, Al-Jeffri M, Al-Ghamdi YS, Mishkhas A, Bakhsh M, Eisa M, Nageeb M, and Tumsah S
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Carrier State epidemiology, Causality, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dental Care adverse effects, Female, Health Services Needs and Demand, Hepatitis B blood, Hepatitis B immunology, Hepatitis B prevention & control, Hepatitis B e Antigens blood, Humans, Mass Screening, Mass Vaccination organization & administration, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious blood, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious immunology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious prevention & control, Program Evaluation, Residence Characteristics, Saudi Arabia epidemiology, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Surgical Procedures, Operative adverse effects, Transfusion Reaction, Hepatitis B epidemiology, Hepatitis B Surface Antigens blood, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious epidemiology
- Abstract
In 1990, Saudi Arabia began vaccinating all children at school entry against hepatitis B. We evaluated hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) prevalence rate among pregnant Saudi women 12 years later in 5 regions of the country. Using multistage sampling, 2664 pregnant Saudi women were recruited. Blood samples were tested for HBsAg; positive samples were also tested for hepatitis Be antigen (HBeAg). In all 2.44% were positive for HBsAg and 4 (0.15%) were also positive for HBeAg. HBsAg prevalence was highest in Gizan (4.2%) and lowest in Tabuk (1.4%). Positivity for women < or = 20 years of age was 0.5% compared with 2.6% for older women (P = 0.049). The overall HBsAg prevalence rate was lower than previously reported.
- Published
- 2005