• JAMA · Nov 2024

    Tenofovir and Hepatitis B Virus Transmission During Pregnancy: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

    • Calvin Q Pan, Erhei Dai, Zhongfu Mo, Hua Zhang, Thomas Q Zheng, Yuming Wang, Yingxia Liu, Tianyan Chen, Suwen Li, Cuili Yang, Jinjuan Wu, Xiuli Chen, Huaibin Zou, Shanshan Mei, and Lin Zhu.
    • Guangzhou Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Center for Liver Diseases, Guangzhou Eighth People's Hospital, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China.
    • JAMA. 2024 Nov 14.

    ImportanceStandard care for preventing mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in highly viremic mothers consists of maternal antiviral prophylaxis beginning at gestational week 28 combined with an HBV vaccine series and HBV immune globulin (HBIG) at birth. However, HBIG is unavailable in some resource-limited areas.ObjectiveTo determine whether initiating tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) at gestational week 16 combined with HBV vaccinations for infants is noninferior to the standard care of TDF at gestational week 28 combined with HBV vaccinations and HBIG for infants in preventing MTCT in mothers with HBV and high levels of viremia.Design, Setting, And ParticipantsAn unblinded, 2-group, randomized, noninferiority clinical trial was conducted in 7 tertiary care hospitals in China. A total of 280 pregnant individuals (who all identified as women) with HBV DNA levels greater than 200 000 IU/mL were enrolled between June 4, 2018, and February 8, 2021. The final follow-up occurred on March 1, 2022.InterventionsPregnant individuals were randomly assigned to receive either TDF starting at gestational week 16 with HBV vaccinations for the infant or TDF starting at gestational week 28 with HBV vaccinations and HBIG administered to the infant.Main Outcomes And MeasuresThe primary outcome was the MTCT rate, defined as detectable HBV DNA greater than 20 IU/mL or hepatitis B surface antigen positivity in infants at age 28 weeks. Noninferiority was established if the MTCT rate in the experimental group did not increase by more than an absolute difference of 3% compared with the standard care group, as measured by the upper limit of the 2-sided 90% CI.ResultsAmong 280 pregnant individuals who enrolled in the trial (mean age, 28 years; mean gestational age at enrollment, 16 weeks), 265 (95%) completed the study. Among all live-born infants, using the last observation carried forward, the MTCT rate was 0.76% (1/131) in the experimental group and 0% (0/142) in the standard care group. In the per-protocol analysis, the MTCT rate was 0% (0/124) in the experimental group and 0% (0/141) in the standard care group. The between-group difference was 0.76% (upper limit of the 2-sided 90% CI, 1.74%) in all live-born infants and 0% (upper limit of the 2-sided 90% CI, 1.43%) in the per-protocol analysis. Both comparisons met the criterion for noninferiority. Rates of congenital defects and malformations were 2.3% (3/131) in the experimental group and 6.3% (9/142) in the standard care group (difference, 4% [2-sided 95% CI, -8.8% to 0.7%]).Conclusions And RelevanceAmong pregnant women with HBV and high levels of viremia, TDF beginning at gestational week 16 combined with HBV vaccination for infants was noninferior to the standard care of TDF beginning at gestational week 28 combined with HBIG and HBV vaccination for infants. These results support beginning TDF at gestational week 16 combined with infant HBV vaccine to prevent MTCT of HBV in geographic areas where HBIG is not available.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03476083.

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