World Health Organization
منظمة الصحة العالمية
Organisation mondiale de la Santé

15-year evaluation of changes in the HBsAg positivity rate in pregnant women in Turkey: the prominent effect of national vaccination

Print

PDF version

Selma Tosun,1 Ayşegül Erdoğan,2 Ayşe Torun,3 Selma Sever,4 Sibel Altuntas,5 İlknur Yildiz,6 Hüseyin Kutlu,7 Mehmet Ceylan,8 Pembe Yesilbag,9Bayhan Bektore,10 Nefise Oztoprak,11 Buket Gungor,12 Sezen Koparan,13 Gülnur Kul,14 Ali Olut,1 Bülent Altuntaş15 and Multicenter Study Group

1Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Bozyaka Education and Research Hospital, University of Health Sciences, İzmir, Turkey. 2Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Sütçü İmam University, Kahramanmaraş, Turkey (Correspondence to: Ayşegül Erdoğan: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ). 3Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Şanlıurfa Education and Research Hospital, Şanlıurfa, Turkey. 4Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Uşak Banaz State Hospital, Uşak, Turkey. 5Department of Family Medicine, Başakşehir Çam and Sakura State Hospital, İstanbul, Turkey. 6Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan University, Rize, Turkey. 7Department of Medical Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Uşak University, Uşak, Turkey. 8Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Harran University, Şanlıurfa, Turkey. 9Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology; 10Department of Medical Microbiology, Kars Harakani State Hospital, Kars, Turkey. 11Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Antalya Education and Research Hospital, Antalya, Turkey. 12Department of Pharmacology; 13Department of Public Health, Antalya Provincial Health Directorate, Antalya, Turkey. 14Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Kırıkhan State Hospital, Hatay, Turkey. 15Esenyurt Family Health Center, İstanbul, Turkey.

Abstract

Background: The detection of hepatitis B surface antigen positivity in pregnant women before delivery is crucial to preventing mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis B virus.

Aims: This study aimed to evaluate the status and rate of testing for hepatitis B surface antigen, rate of hepatitis B surface antigen positivity, hepatitis B surface antigen positivity distribution rate by age, and changes in hepatitis B surface antigen positivity rate in pregnant women over the study period.

Methods: We conducted a multicentre, cross-sectional, descriptive study covering the period January 2005 to June 2019 for 2 145 668 pregnant women from 27 provinces in all 7 regions of Turkey, collected using Microsoft Excel before statistical analysis.

Results: We found that 1 012 593 (47.1%) pregnant women were tested for hepatitis B surface antigen over the 15-year period, out of which 11 471 (1.1%) were hepatitis B surface antigen-positive. Overall, 97% of the hepatitis B surface antigen positive women were born before 1998, the year that national HBV vaccination was launched in Turkey. The rate of hepatitis B surface antigen positivity in that group was 1.1%, compared with 0.3% among women born after 1998.

Conclusion: There was a downward trend in the hepatitis B surface antigen positivity rate among pregnant women in the younger age groups, especially among those born after universal hepatitis B vaccination was inaugurated, and low rate of HBsAg testing during pregnancy.

Keywords: HBsAg positivity, pregnancy, vaccination, women Turkey

Citation: Tosun S; Erdoğan A; Torun A; Seve S; Altuntas S; Yildiz I; et al. 15-year evaluation of changes in the HBsAg positivity rate in pregnant women in Turkey: the prominent effect of national vaccination. East Mediterr Health J. 2022;28(10):768–775. https://doi.org/10.26719/emhj.22.071

Received: 26/08/21; accepted: 29/06/22

Copyright © Authors 2022; licensee World Health Organization. EMHJ is an open access journal. This paper is available under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial ShareAlike 3.0 IGO licence (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/igo).


Introduction

Worldwide, approximately 90% of people with chronic hepatitis are not aware of their illness (1). They may consequently spread the hepatitis B virus (HBV) to others and experience progression of the disease. Perinatal exposure is a significant mode of HBV transmission, resulting in chronic disease in approximately 90% of infected infants. Exposure to HBV in infancy or early childhood is associated with an increased risk of developing cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (1,2). It is, therefore, crucial to notify HBsAg positive pregnant women and take necessary precautions to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HBV. These precautions include routine prenatal screening for HBsAg in combination with the administration of hepatitis B hyper immunoglobulin (HBIG) within the first 12–24 hours after delivery, followed by HBV vaccination of infants born of HBsAg positive mothers (3–5). Despite adequate prophylaxis with hepatitis B vaccination and HBIG, HBV transmission may occur at a rate of 5–10% in infants of HBeAg-positive mothers with a detectable HBV DNA level > 10 IU/mL (6,7). Some strategies, especially therapy with antiviral drugs, are therefore recommended in those with high viral load during pregnancy to reduce the amount of virus (viral load) in the blood. This strategy is essential to protect unborn babies from mother-to-child transmission (1,6–8).

Nowadays, even in most countries where HBV is endemic, HBsAg screening using an ELISA test during pregnancy is far below desirable levels. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that each pregnant woman should be tested for HBsAg during the first prenatal visit in each pregnancy and further recommends HBsAg testing for all pregnant women, even if they had been previously vaccinated or tested (9–12).

The recommendations on the necessity of testing for HBsAg in pregnancy were first defined in Turkey in the antenatal care guidelines published by the Ministry of Health in 2014 (13). A considerable lack of knowledge or awareness of this guideline among physicians led to poor compliance with screening for HBsAg and insufficient requests for HBsAg testing during pregnancy; HBsAg testing, therefore, could not be done among pregnant women at the desired levels throughout the country. There was no legal obligation in Turkey to screen pregnant women for HBsAg during pregnancy until 2018. Thus, until 2018 physicians tested pregnant women for HBsAg only as a recommended option (13).

Turkey is among the moderately endemic countries in terms of HBV, located in the European continent and adjacent to the Asian continent. Its universal HBV vaccination programme started in 1998. Adolescent vaccination campaigns (catch-up campaigns) were carried out in schools between 2005 and 2009. Health workers and adults in the high-risk group are vaccinated free of charge by the Ministry of Health. Children born in 1998 and 1999 who were vaccinated at birth were revaccinated during the catch-up campaign. Catch-up vaccinations have not been administered since 2000. Within the scope of safe injection practices, the use of disposable syringes started in 1985 and safe blood transfusion practices are carried out meticulously. For this reason, the incidence of acute HBV cases in Turkey has decreased over the years, and chronic HBV infection has decreased significantly, especially in children and adolescents (14).

The World Health Organization initiated a programme (the Global Health Sector Strategy) to eliminate viral hepatitis throughout the world by 2030 and to reduce the number of cases and the number of deaths due to this disease (2). In compliance with this programme, the Turkish Ministry of Health created and implemented the Chronic Viral Hepatitis Prevention and Control Programme in October 2018 (14). The programme made it legally obligatory for physicians to order HBsAg testing during pregnancy for all pregnant women, in addition to adopting the strategies included in the Global Health Sector Strategy in Turkey (14).

Since implementation of this programme just began in Turkey, this study assessed the rates of HBsAg screening in pregnant women and the situation before the programme started. We conducted this study to determine the changes in the status and rate of testing for HBsAg and the HBsAg positivity rate among pregnant women during 2005–2019. We especially wanted to do this before the implementation of the Viral Hepatitis Prevention and Control Programme, which will continue for 5 years (14).

Methods

Study design

We performed this multicentre, retrospective, cross-sectional study between 1 July 2019 and 1 July 2020; the data included in the study were obtained between 2005 and 2019. We created an Excel form and sent it to all health centres, followed by the agreement of the centres to participate in the study. Data were collected from 50 primary, secondary and tertiary health centres in 27 of the 81 provinces in Turkey (Adana, Aksaray, Ankara, Antalya, Batman, Çanakkale, Denizli, Edirne, Gaziantep, Giresun, Hatay, Iğdır, İstanbul, İzmir, Kahramanmaraş, Kars, Kütahya, Manisa, Mersin, Muş, Rize, Şanlıurfa, Şırnak, Tekirdağ, Trabzon, Uşak, Yozgat), distributed throughout the country.

Each participating centre recorded its data in the Excel form and sent it to our centre for each year. The data included: the number of pregnant women admitted to the centres, number of pregnant women tested for HBsAg, number confirmed to be HBsAg-positive and the birth dates of the pregnant women.

We subsequently stratified the data for HBsAg-positive pregnant women by age group and year and analysed the data in terms of the annual rate of HBsAg positivity. The pregnant women in our study were divided into 5-year age groups. Since the mothers who were born in 1998 and 1999 were revaccinated in the catch-up campaign, these and the other mothers who were born in 2000 and after (who were vaccinated at birth only) were evaluated in separate groups. We evaluated all of the data separately for each institution per year of the study. The study physician responsible for each centre deleted duplicate records. The patients’ data were anonymized under the privacy policy to prevent disclosing personal information. We recorded only the initial letters of the first and last names, date of birth and test results in the Excel form before sending the data for statistical analysis.

Statistical analysis

The data were analyzed using the JASP software, version 9.2.0, using descriptive statistical methods (number, percentage, frequency). Simple linear regression analysis was performed to determine changes in the rate of HBsAg positivity over time. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Ethical considerations

We obtained ethical approval from the institutional ethics boards of the University of Health Sciences, Izmir Bozyaka Education and Research Hospital (08.09.2016, No. 430) and the Turkish Public Health Institution Presidency (05.05.2016, No. 45202601).

Results

The data for 2 145 668 pregnant women admitted into 50 primary, secondary or tertiary healthcare centres from 27 provinces and all 7 regions of Turkey were analysed. Of these women, 3729 (0.2%), 47 1928 (22.0%) and 1 670 011 (77.8%) were followed up in primary, secondary and tertiary health care units, respectively. Among those who received care in primary, secondary and tertiary health care units, HBsAg testing was carried out in 1545 (41.4%), 174 347 (36.9%) and 83 670 (50.1%) pregnant women, respectively.

The rate of testing for HBsAg during pregnancy was reported to be ≥ 90% in 8 centres. The distribution of the status and rate of testing for HBsAg and the rate of HBsAg positivity in pregnant women is shown in Table 1.

In total, 1 012 593 (47.1%) pregnant women were tested for HBsAg; 11 471 (1.1%) were found to be HBsAg positive (Table 1). The largest group of the HBsAg positive patients (35.8%) were in the 29–35 years age group followed by the 36–40 years (22.0%), 25–28 years (15.2%) and 41–45 years (12.3%) age groups (Table 2). Of the 11 471 pregnant women included in our study, 11 138 (97.1%) were born in or before 1997, and only 333 (2.9%) were born in or after 1998 (after the start of the universal HBV vaccination programme).

Turkey comprises 7 geographical regions, and HBsAg positivity rates were determined for these regions: Marmara (1.46%), Black Sea (3.30%), Aegean (1.40%), Central Anatolia (0.28%), Eastern Anatolia (1.51%), Mediterranean (1.10%) and South-Eastern Anatolia (1.63%).

The number of pregnant women attending a health centre, the number of HBsAg tests and the rate of HBsAg positivity in pregnant women in each province are shown in Table 3. HBsAg positivity was partially higher in Eastern Anatolia, South-Eastern Anatolia and Black Sea regions. However, due to internal migration the rates may differ in other regions as well. The centre in the Black Sea region, which participated in our study, is a university hospital that closely monitors HBsAg positivity cases in pregnant women referred from the surrounding area. This region receives immigrants from some countries in the Black Sea region where HBsAg positivity is higher, and from Eastern.

The numbers of pregnant women attending health centres, numbers of HBsAg tests and numbers of HBsAg positivity according to year are shown in Table 4. Accordingly, the rates of HBsAg screening in pregnant women did not change significantly over the years. However, HBsAg positivity in pregnant women tended to decrease over the years and has decreased below 1% in recent years.

Simple linear regression analysis showed that the rate of HBsAg positivity decreased significantly over the years (r = –0.798, standard error of the mean = 0.332, P < 0.001) (Figure 1) and the trend is projected to continue over the next 5 years.

Discussion

The HBsAg positivity rate worldwide is estimated to be approximately 3.6% and geographic variations in the natural history of HBV infection are well documented (2,4,6,15,16). There has been a widespread reduction in acute viral hepatitis B cases in recent years. A favourable change in the epidemiology of HBV infection is observed mainly at younger ages – children, adolescents and young adults (1,2). In a 2017 review of studies published during 2005–2015, the rate of HBsAg positivity was estimated to be 1.0–4.4% in the general community in European countries (17). A number of meta-analyses of HBV epidemiological studies from Turkey have reported similar rates and as a common finding of all these surveys, a significant decrease was observed over time in HBsAg positivity rates in the general population (17–20).

Studies published between 2000 and 2016 in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle Eastern regions were included in a meta-analysis which evaluated HBsAg positivity in pregnant women recruited from the countries in these regions. In that report, data on 89 452 pregnant women were examined in 49 articles; HBsAg positivity was reported to range from 1.0% (Qatar) to 10.8% (Yemen) in 12 countries, including Turkey (2.8%) (21).

The HBsAg positivity rate (1.1%) for pregnant women in our study is comparable to the rates in other studies. In more recent studies performed after 2005 involving pregnant women, the rate was reported to vary between 1.2% and 12.3% (mean 4%) (18). A 2016 review from Turkey that examined 64 studies carried out between 1975 and 2016 found that HBsAg positivity among pregnant women was 1.2%–19.2%; it also emphasized that the rate had decreased over the years (22). Another study from Turkey examining the HBsAg positivity rate in pregnant women found rates of 2.6% (n = 3010) between 1995 and 2001, 0.8% (n = 2995) between 2002 and 2008 and 0.8% (n = 1600) between 2009 and 2015 (23). Araz et al. found the rate to be 2% in 11 840 pregnant women (mean age 25.5, range 19–43 years) in Gaziantep, southern Turkey, between 2003 and 2005 (24). Later, Tanrıverdi et al. reported an HBsAg positivity rate of 1.2% among 35 295 pregnant women aged 18–45 years in the eastern region of Turkey between 2013 and 2016 (25). Our findings support this downward trend in the HBsAg positivity rate among pregnant women in recent years. According to the analysis of a survey conducted in the United States of America between 2011 and 2014 that included 819 752 pregnant women aged 10–50 years, the rate of testing for HBsAg was 82% and 0.14% (n = 1190) were diagnosed with HBV infection. In comparison with that study, the rate of testing for HBsAg in pregnant women was extremely low (47.1%) in our study (26).

Only 8 of the 50 centres included in our study were recorded as having an HBsAg testing rate of ≥ 90%. When the data for HBsAg-positive pregnant women were analysed according to age group, the greatest number were in the 29–35 years age group (35.8%), with 22.0% of the 36–40 years age group testing positive. The incidence of acute and chronic HBV infection decreased significantly, especially in children and adolescents, due to the impact of the ongoing national HBV immunization programme since 1998 in Turkey (18,27). According to Public Health Agency data, the rate of vaccination for hepatitis B increased from 64% in 1999 to 98% in 2018 in Turkey (14). As a supplement to the national HBV immunization, children born between 1994 and 1999 and 1991 and 1993 were vaccinated with second doses of hepatitis B vaccine in primary and high schools within the scope of the catch-up vaccination campaign implemented between 2005 and 2009 (28). The catch-up activity was partially implemented for children born between 1991 and 1993. Since the catch-up campaign was applied only to in-school children, it is not clear whether children who did not attend school that day or who were absent for different reasons were vaccinated, nor how many doses they were given. For this reason, it is assumed that students received 1–3 doses of HBV vaccine during this campaign. The lowest rate of HBsAg-positivity in the 16–21 years age group may be an indication of the success of the national and catch-up hepatitis B immunization programmes and support the positive impact of such immunization programmes in pregnant women. People who are exposed to HBV at a younger age are more likely to develop chronic infection and subsequent cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma; the prevention of HBV transmission at younger ages is, therefore, of great importance. Screening of pregnant women for HBsAg and national immunization against HBV in the newborn in combination with the administration of hepatitis B immunoglobulin at the right time are the easiest and

most economical means of preventing hepatitis B. Our study is crucial to ensuring comprehensive and extensive data at the national level, rather than local data in a particular region, on the status and rate of testing for HBsAg and the rate of HBsAg positivity in pregnant women

It is gratifying that, although the rates of HBsAg testing in pregnant women have increased, the rates of HBsAg positivity in pregnant women have decreased significantly over the years. We recommend a new vaccination programme for this population, especially in the national action plan of the Turkish Viral Hepatitis Prevention and Control Programme. We support the creation of a legal obligation to carry out HBsAg testing in pregnant women. Such efforts will help prevent mother-to-child transmission of HBV and lead to a subsequent reduction in the prevalence of HBV infection.

Acknowledgement

We would like to express our gratitude to all the persons who participated in this study.

Funding: None

Competing interests: None declared.

Quinze ans d'évaluation de l'évolution du taux de positivité de l'AgHBs chez les femmes enceintes en Turquie : l'effet majeur de la vaccination nationale

Résumé

Contexte : La détection d'une positivité à l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B chez les femmes enceintes avant l'accouchement est cruciale pour prévenir la transmission mère-enfant du virus de l'hépatite B.

Objectifs : La présente étude visait à évaluer le statut et le taux de dépistage de l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite  B, le taux de positivité à l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B, le taux de distribution de l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite  B selon l'âge, et l'évolution du taux de positivité de l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B chez les femmes enceintes au cours de la période d'étude.

Méthodes : Nous avons mené une étude multicentrique, transversale et descriptive couvrant la période allant de janvier 2005 jusqu'à juin 2019 pour 2 145 668 femmes enceintes de 27 provinces dans les sept régions de Turquie, collectée à l'aide de Microsoft Excel avant l'analyse statistique.

Résultats : Nous avons constaté que 1 012 593 (47, 1 %) femmes enceintes avaient été testées pour l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B au cours de cette période de 15 ans, dont 11 471 (1,1 %) étaient positives. Globalement, 97 % des femmes positives à l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B étaient nées avant 1998, année où la vaccination nationale contre le VHB a été lancée en Turquie. Le taux de positivité à l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B dans ce groupe était de 1,1 %, contre 0,3 % chez les femmes nées après 1998.

Conclusion : On a constaté une tendance à la baisse du taux de positivité à l'antigène de surface de l'hépatite B chez les femmes enceintes des groupes d'âge plus jeunes, en particulier chez celles nées après le lancement de la vaccination universelle contre l'hépatite B, et un faible taux de dépistage de l'AgHBs pendant la grossesse.

تقييم 15 عامًا من التغييرات في معدل النتائج الإيجابية للمُستضَدِّ السطحي للالتهاب الكبدي B/ المستضد الأسترالي لدى النساء الحوامل في تركيا: التأثير البارز للتطعيم على المستوى الوطني

سلمى طوسون، عائشة أردوغان، عائش تورن، سلمى سيفر، سيبيل ألتونتاس، إلكنور يلديز، حسين كوتلو، محمد سيلان، بيمبي يسيلباج، بيهان بكتوري، نفيس أوزتوبراك، بوكيت جونجور، سيزين كوبران، جولنور كول، علي أولوت، بولنت ألتونتاش، فريق دراسة متعدد المراكز

الخلاصة

الخلفية: ثمة أهمية كبرى لاكتشاف النساء الحوامل الإيجابيات للمستضدات السطحية للالتهاب الكبدي B اكتشافًا مبكرًا في مرحلة ما قبل الولادة، لتَوقِّي انتقال فيروس الالتهاب الكبدي B من الأم إلى الطفل.

الأهداف: هدفت هذه الدراسة إلى تقييم حالة ومعدل اختبار المستضدات السطحية للالتهاب الكبدي B، ومعدل الحالات الإيجابية لهذه المستضدات، وتوزيع الحالات حسب العمر، والتغيُّرات في معدل النتائج الإيجابية للمستضدات لدى النساء الحوامل على امتداد فترة الدراسة.

طرق البحث: أجرينا دراسة وصفية مقطعية متعددة المراكز عن المدة من يناير/ كانون الثاني 2005 إلى يونيو/ حزيران 2019، وشملت ما مجموعه 2145668 امرأة حاملًا من 27 محافظة في جميع المناطق السبع في تركيا، وجُمعت البيانات باستخدام برنامج مايكروسوفت إكسيل قبل إجراء التحليل الإحصائي.

النتائج: وجدنا أن 1012593 امرأة حاملًا (47.1%) قد خضعن لاختبار المستضد السطحي للالتهاب الكبدي B على مدى 15 عامًا، وجاء بينهن 11471 عينة إيجابية (1.1%) لهذه المستضدات. وإجمالًا، تبيَّن أن 97٪ من النساء الإيجابيات للمستضدات قد وُلدن قبل عام 1998، وهو العام الذي دُشِّنَ فيه التلقيح الوطني ضد فيروس التهاب الكبد B في تركيا. وبلغ معدل الإيجابية تجاه المستضدات السطحية للالتهاب الكبدي B في هذه المجموعة 1.1%، مقارنة بنسبة 0.3% بين النساء اللاتي وُلدن بعد عام 1998.

الاستنتاجات: تبيَّن وجود اتجاه لانخفاض في معدل النتائج الإيجابية تجاه المستضدات السطحية للالتهاب الكبدي B بين النساء الحوامل في الفئات العمرية الأصغر، ولا سيما بين أولئك اللاتي قد وُلدن بعد تدشين التطعيم الشامل ضد التهاب الكبد B، وانخفاض معدل اختبار المستضدات السطحية للالتهاب الكبدي B في أثناء الحمل.

References

  1. Global hepatitis report 2017. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2017 (https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/global-hepatitis-report-2017, accessed 28 July 2022)
  2. Global health sector strategy on viral hepatitis 2016–2021. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2016 (https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/246177, accessed 10 October 2020)
  3. Vodkin I, Patton H. Management of Hepatitis B virus infection during pregnancy. Minerva Gastroenterol Dietol. 2014;60(4):205-14.
  4. Guidelines for the prevention care and treatment of persons with chronic hepatitis B infection, March 2015. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2015 (https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241549059, accessed 1 October 2020)
  5. Adeyemi AB, Enabor OO, Ugwu IA, Bello FA, Olayemi OO. Knowledge of hepatitis B virus infection, access to screening and vaccination among pregnant women in Ibadan, Nigeria. J Obstet Gynaecol. 2013;33(2):155-9. https://doi.org/10.3109/01443615.2012.711389
  6. Aslam A, Campoverde Reyes KJ, Malladi VR, Ishtiaq R, Lau DTY. Management of chronic hepatitis B during pregnancy. Gastroenterol Rep (Oxf). 2018;6(4):257-262. https://doi.org/10.1093/gastro/goy025
  7. World Health Organization. Hepatitis B vaccines: WHO position paper, July 2017 – recommendations. Vaccine. 2019;37(2):223–5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.07.046
  8. Terrault NA, Lok ASF, McMahon BJ, Chang KM, Hwang JP, Jonas MM, et al. Update on prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of chronic hepatitis B: AASLD 2018 hepatitis B guidance. Clin Liver Dis (Hoboken). 2018;12(1):33-34. https://doi.org/10.1002/cld.728
  9. Lin K, Vickery J. Screening for hepatitis B virus infection in pregnant women: evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force reaffirmation recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med. 2009;150(12):874–6. https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-150-12-200906160-00012
  10. Shao Z, Al Tibi M, Wakim-Fleming J. Update on viral hepatitis in pregnancy. Cleve Clin J Med. 2017;84(3):202–6. https://doi.org/10.3949/ccjm.84a.15139
  11. Society for Maternal–Fetal Medicine (SMFM), Dionne-Odom J, Tita AT, Silverman NS. #38: Hepatitis B in pregnancy screening, treatment, and prevention of vertical transmission. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016;214(1):6–14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2015.09.100
  12. Mast EE, Margolis HS, Fiore AE, Brink EW, Goldstein ST, Wang SA, et al. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). A comprehensive immunization strategy to eliminate transmission of hepatitis B virus infection in the United States: recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) part 1: immunization of infants, children, and adolescents. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2005;54(RR–16):1–31. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5416a1.htm
  13. Antenatal care management guide. Ankara: Republic of Turkey Ministry of Health, 2014 (https://ekutuphane.saglik.gov.tr/Yayin/466, accessed 18 April 2020).
  14. Turkey Viral Hepatitis Prevention and Control Program (2018–2023). Ankara: Republic of Turkey Ministry of Health; 2018 (https://hsgm.saglik.gov.tr/depo/birimler/Bulasici-hastaliklar-db/duyurular/Turkiye_Viral_Hepatit_Onleme_ve_Kontrol_Programi/Turkiye_Viral_Hepatit_Onleme_ve_Kontrol_Programi_TR.pdf, accessed 25 April 2020).
  15. Ott JJ, Stevens GA, Groeger J, Wiersma ST. Global epidemiology of hepatitis B virus infection: new estimates of age-specific HBsAg seroprevalence and endemicity. Vaccine. 2012;30(12):2212–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2011.12.116
  16. Schweitzer A, Horn J, Mikolajczyk RT, Krause G, Ott JJ. Estimations of worldwide prevalence of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: a systematic review of data published between 1965 and 2013. Lancet. 2015;386(10003):1546–55. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)61412-X
  17. Hofstraat SHI, Falla AM, Duffell EF, Hahné SJM, Amato-Gauci AJ, Veldhuijzen IK, et al. Current prevalence of chronic hepatitis B and C virus infection in the general population, blood donors and pregnant women in the EU/EEA: a systematic review. Epidemiol Infect. 2017;145(14):2873–85. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817001947
  18. Tosun S. Epidemiology of viral hepatitis B in the world and in Turkey. In: Güner R, Tabak F, eds. Viral Hepatit 2018. Istanbul: Istanbul Medical Health and Publishing, 2018,1:13–8.
  19. Mistik R. The epidemiology of viral hepatitis in Turkey: a meta-analysis. In: Kılıçturgay K, ed. Viral Hepatit 98. Bursa: Viral Hepatit Savasim Derneği; 1998 1:9–20.
  20. Mistik R. The epidemiology of viral hepatitis in Turkey: analysis of published data. In: Tabak F, ed. Viral Hepatit. Istanbul: Viral Hepatit Savasim Derneği; 2007 1:10–50.
  21. Malekifar P, Babanejad M, Izadi N, Alavian S M. The frequency of HBsAg in pregnant women from Eastern Mediterranean and Middle Eastern countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Hepat Mon. 2018;18(9):e58830. https://doi.org/10.5812/hepatmon.58830
  22. Bakar RZ, Dane B. Hepatitis B seropositivity of pregnant women and the review of Turkish literature. Perinatal J. 2016;24(2):
  23. 83–88. https://dx.doi.org/10.2399/prn.16.0242005
  24. Furuncuoglu Y, Bolukbas FF, Bolukbas C, Torun P, Ozturk R. Changes in the prevalence of HBV infection in pregnant women in Turkey between 1995 and 2015: a 20-year evaluation. Postgrad Med J. 2016;92(1091):510–3. https://doi.org/10.1136/postgradmedj-2015-133876
  25. Araz NC, Dikensoy E. Seroprevalence of hepatitis B among pregnant women in southern Turkey. J Pak Med Assoc. 2011;61(2):
  26. 176–7. https://jpma.org.pk/PdfDownload/2589
  27. Tanrıverdi EC, Özkurt Z, Göktuğ Kadıoğlu B, Alay H, Çalıkoğlu O, Koca Ö, et al. Seroprevalence of hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and HIV in pregnant women from Eastern Turkey. Turk J Gastroenterol. 2019;30(3):260–5. https://doi.org/10.5152/tjg.2018.17634
  28. Harris AM, Isenhour C, Schillie S, Vellozzi C. Hepatitis B virus testing and care among pregnant women using commercial claims data, United States, 2011–2014. Infect Dis Obstet Gynecol. 2018;2018:4107329. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/4107329
  29. Tozun N, Ozdogan O, Cakaloglu Y, Idilman R, Karasu Z, Akarca U, et al. Seroprevalence of hepatitis B and C virus infections and risk factors in Turkey: a fieldwork TURHEP study. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2015;21(11):1020–6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2015.06.028
  30. Ay P, Torunoglu MA, Com S, Çipil Z, Mollahaliloğlu S, Erkoc Y, et al. Trends of hepatitis B notification rates in Turkey, 1990 to 2012. Euro Surveill. 2013;18(47):20636. https://doi.org/10.2807/1560-7917.es2013.18.47.20636