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American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 136, No. 5: 603-610
Copyright © 1992 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health


other

Prevalence and Incidence of Viral Hepatitis in Health Workers in the Prehepatitis B Vaccination Era

Alexandra Gibas1 6, Dyan Ryan Blewett2, David A. Schoenfeid3 and Jules L. Dienstag1,4,5

1Gastrointestinal Unit (Medical Services), Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA
2Laboratory of Computer Science, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA
3Biostatistics Center, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA
4Liver-Biliary-Pancreas Center, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA
5Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School Boston, MA

To assess the impact of hepatitis B virus on health workers, the authors studied baseline prevalences of hepatitis B serologic markers and undertook prospective surveillance to assess hepatitis B attack rates in 837 health workers and 994 blood-donor controls between 1977 and 1982, before the introduction of hepatitis B vaccine. The baseline prevalence of all hepatitis B markers was 14% in health workers and 6% in controls (p < 0.001); exposure to hepatitis B virus was related to the intensity of blood exposure and its duration. In contrast, the frequency of exposure to hepatitis A virus a nonblood-borne agent, was lower in health workers (11%) than in controls (16%) (p < 0.01) and increased as a function of age. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified occupational categories with frequent blood contact, rather than duration of exposure, as being the dominant variable for exposure to hepatitis B virus; for hepatitis A virus exposure, age was the most significant variable. Among health workers susceptible to hepatitis B, the incidence of new definite hepatitis B infections was 1.0% per year in 362 health workers (804 person-years of follow-up observation) with frequent blood contact versus 0% per year in 258 health workers (534 person-years of observation) with limited blood contact (p = 0.017). For definite plus probable cases combined, the incidence of new hepatitis B infections was 1.5% per year versus 0.2% per year for the groups with frequent and limited blood exposures, respectively (p = 0.0013). There were no new cases of hepatitis A or B or seroconversions in controls and only one case of hepatitis A acquired outside the hospital by a health worker. These data confirm the high prevalence of hepatitis B exposure and document in a prospective study the high incidence over time of new hepatitis B virus infections in health workers unprotected by vaccination. Such findings reiterate the need for aggressive vaccination programs in health workers xposed to blood. Am J Epidemiol 1992; 136: 603–10

hepatitis A; hepatitis B; occupational diseases; personnel, hospital


6Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH.


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Arch Intern MedHome page
F. J. Mahoney, K. Stewart, H. Hu, P. Coleman, and M. J. Alter
Progress Toward the Elimination of Hepatitis B Virus Transmission Among Health Care Workers in the United States
Arch Intern Med, December 8, 1997; 157(22): 2601 - 2605.
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