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A significant sex - but not elective cesarean section - effect on mother - to- child transmission of hepatitis C virus infection

Authors :
M. R. Sartorelli
Anna Maria Casadei
L. Lazier
C. Fabris
G. Lindh
G. Cilla
F. Asensi-Botet
A. Corrias
C. Riva
Vania Giacomet
S. Lindgren
Karina Butler
Raffaele Iorio
Charles A. Boucher
J. Ruiz Contreras
Angela Vegnente
Elisabetta Tanzi
Antonio Amoroso
H. O. Fjaerli
Filippo Salvini
M. Viñolas
A. Hatzakis
Alessandra Viganò
C. Inchley
V. Balossini
J. Echeverria
A. De Maria
C. Figini
S. Hannam
A.R. Zanetti
M. Merlo
P. Grella
J. Y.Q. Mok
D. M. Paternoster
A. Pereda
G. Claret Teruel
Marie-Louise Newell
I. Grosch-Wörner
Valentina Venturi
C. Servera Ginard
M. Zaffaroni
T. Schmitz
Dante Bassetti
A. Coscia
P. Martin Fontelos
S. Garetto
G. Bossi
Antonio Mazza
S. Ferrando
A. Mur
G. Norkrans
C. Fortuny
Susanne Polywka
J. M. Bertran Sanges
B. Salati
A. Manzanares
A. Berg
Pier-Angelo Tovo
R. Rosso
Wilma Buffolano
T. Piening
Paola Erba
S. Floris
Marcello Lanari
Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti
L. Cabero Roura
A. B. Bohlin
S. Aime
Oriol Coll
A. Maccabruni
A. Bandelloni
A Alfarano
C. Belloni
M. Marcellini
E. Tridapalli
A. Versace
Giacomo Faldella
S. Bressio
Isabella Quinti
Lucy Pembrey
A. Rojahn
P. Cigna
B. Fischler
C. Feiterna Sperling
A. Ruiz Extremera
L. M. Ciria
G. Mieli-Vergani
R. Wejstal
R. Ledda
Gianni Bona
Tovo, P. A.
Pembrey, L.
Newell, M. L.
Iorio, Raffaele
European, Paediatric Hepatitis C Virus Network
Lanari, M.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Risk factors for mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) are poorly quantified. METHODS: We conducted a European multicenter prospective study of HCV-infected pregnant women and their infants. Children with > or =2 positive HCV RNA polymerase chain reaction test results and/or anti-HCV antibodies after 18 months of age were considered to be infected. RESULTS: The overall HCV vertical transmission rate was 6.2% (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.0%-7.5%; 91/1479). Girls were twice as likely to be infected as boys (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 2.07 [95% CI, 1.23-3.48]; P=.006). There was no protective effect of elective cesarean section (CS) delivery on HCV vertical transmission (adjusted OR, 1.46 [95% CI, 0.86-2.48]; P=.16). HCV/human immunodeficiency virus-coinfected women more frequently transmitted HCV than did women with HCV infection only, although the difference was not statistically significant (adjusted OR, 1.82 [95% CI, 0.94-3.52]; P=.08). Maternal history of injection drug use, prematurity, and breast-feeding were not significantly associated with transmission. Transmission occurred more frequently from viremic women, but it also occurred from a few nonviremic women. CONCLUSIONS: Our results strongly suggest that women should neither be offered an elective CS nor be discouraged from breast-feeding on the basis of HCV infection alone. The sex association is an intriguing finding that probably reflects biological differences in susceptibility or response to infection.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16e1d679c69915ffbf600b04a4461973