Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 1 | Page 12

PUBLIC HEALTH PREVENTION OF PERINATAL HEPATITIS B TRANSMISSION AUTHORS Lori Caloia, MD, and John T. Stutts, MD, MPH I nfant hepatitis B infection is a preventable communicable disease, and prompt and appropriate treatment of infants born to a mother with hepatitis B infection can change the outcome of these young lives. We receive a lot of phone calls at Louis- ville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness about management of perinatal hepatitis B virus. What do I do if I have a mother who is Hepatitis B Surface Antigen (HBsAg) positive? What about a newborn? A pre-term infant? This article will answer these questions for you, and our expert nursing staff in Communicable Diseases will be there to answer any questions you may have—just give them a call at (502) 574-6677. The Kentucky Administrative Regulation, 902 KAR 2:020, re- quires all licensed health care professionals and health care facilities to report cases of acute hepatitis B infection as well as hepatitis B infection in pregnant women to the local or state health department 1 . The local health department has a Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Coordinator who assists with case management of infants. This indi- vidual ensures the implementation of the state and federal protocols for the Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program, which consists of surveillance, monitoring and testing, and case management of these infants. When our Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program Coordinator contacts you, please comply with the requested testing, immunization recommendations, and provide the documentation upon completion of each action in order to fulfill the mandated 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE program requirements. At the time of hospital admission, the HBsAg status of all preg- nant women should be reviewed. If no HBsAg status is available, then testing should be performed as soon as possible. Women with risk factors for HBV who test negative early in pregnancy (> six months prior to delivery) should be retested at the time of delivery 2 . Preg- nant women who have risk factors for hepatitis B infection should be vaccinated. These risks include: injection drug use, household or sexual contact of someone with hepatitis B virus, more than one sex partner during the previous six months and seeking evaluation or treatment for a sexually transmitted infection 3 . At the time of hospital discharge, the mother should receive the infant’s immunization record and must be instructed to bring it to the first pediatrician/family physician visit. This information should also be forwarded to the office of the infant’s planned provider in conjunction with the discharge summary. All mothers should be instructed to complete the infant’s three-shot HBV vaccine series within six months. Mothers with positive HBsAg status should be reported to the Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness within 24 hours via fax at (502) 574-5865. If you are outside of Jefferson County, this should be faxed to your local health department or to the Kentucky Department of Public Health (KDPH) at (502) 564-4760. Hepatitis B reporting can be complet- ed by filling out this form: EPID 200 Kentucky Reportable Disease Form (https://bit.ly/2WI3LMB) & EPID 394 Hepatitis Infection in Pregnant Women or Child (https://bit.ly/2W5LVWR) and faxing to the appropriate location.