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Children with Chronic Hepatitis B in the United States and Canada

Authors :
Kathleen B. Schwarz
Yona Keich Cloonan
Simon C. Ling
Karen F. Murray
Norberto Rodriguez-Baez
Sarah Jane Schwarzenberg
Jeffrey Teckman
Lilia Ganova-Raeva
Philip Rosenthal
Kathleen Schwarz
Karen Murray
Steven Belle
Harry Janssen
Simon Ling
Norah Terrault
Lewis R. Roberts
Adrian Di Bisceglie
Jeffery Teckman
Lilia Milkova Ganova-Raeva
Hongxia Li
Douglas Mogul
Robert Anders
Kim Kafka
Shannon M. Riggs
Rosemary Nagy
Jacki Cerkoski
Caitlin Yuan
Rosemary Swan
Constance O'Connor
Laurie A. Rodgers-Augustyniak
Shirley Montanye
Shannon Fleck
Camille Langlois
Kara L. Cooper
Michelle Danielson
Tamara Haller
Geoffrey Johnson
Stephanie Kelley
Sharon Lawlor
Ruosha Li
Manuel Lombardero
Joan M. MacGregor
Andrew Pelesko
Donna Stoliker
Barbara Walters
Ella Zadorozny
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 167(6)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that children with chronic hepatitis B living in the US and Canada would have international origins and characteristic hepatitis B virus (HBV) genotypes and laboratory profiles.Clinical characteristics of children enrolled in the Hepatitis B Research Network were collected from 7 US and Canadian centers.Children (n = 343) with an age range of 1.0-17.8 years were enrolled; 78% of the children were Asian, 55% were adopted, and 97% had international origins with either the child or a parent born in 1 of 31 countries. The majority had HBV genotype B (43%) or C (32%), and the remainder had genotype A (5%), D (16%), E (4%), or multiple (1%). Children with genotype B or C were more likely to be Asian (98% and 96%), more consistently hepatitis B envelope antigen positive (95% and 82%), had higher median HBV DNA levels (8.2 and 8.3 log10 IU/mL), and less frequently had elevated alanine aminotransferase values (43% and 57%) compared with children with other genotypes. The percentage of hepatitis B envelope antigen positivity and of those with HBV DNA ≥6 log₁₀ IU/mL declined with age.The majority of children in the Hepatitis B Research Network have HBV genotypes that reflect their international origins. Clinical and laboratory data differ substantially by patient age and HBV genotype. Use of these data can help drive the development of optimal strategies to manage and treat children with chronic hepatitis B.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
167
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd9752d2164664ccb84b1699a8cb5601