Hepatitis B Flashcards
What is the most common ways that Hepatitis B is transmitted?
through blood and also through sexual contact.
**Low amount to non traceable levels in urine, sweat, feces, breast milk or tears
Who are some of the at risk populations for hepatitis B in the US?
Sexual contacts
Household contacts
Intravenous drug users
Health care workers
People working with/receiving blood products or dialysis
Residents/staff of facilities for developmentally disabled persons
What will you see in a newly infected (acute) infection with hepatitis B?
HBsAg positive
Anti-HBc positive
IgM anti-HBc positive
Anti-HBs negative
What will you see in a patient with chronic infection hepatitis B?
HBsAg positive for more than 6 months
Total Anti-HBc positive
IgM anti-HBc negative
anti-HBs negative
When would you order a PCR test (viral load)?
Indications Treatment decisions Response to treatment Chronic infection Unusual presentation
Absolutely requires HBV infection
Utilizes HBV protein shell
Hepatitis D
***Can occur acutely (coinfection) with HBV or as superinfection after HBV
What is treatment for chronic hepatitis B?
Pegylated interferon and ribavirin
Protease inhibitors
Adefovir, entecavir, telbivudine, tenofovir
Lamivudine (virus may become resistant)
Do we treat patient if E Antigen-Negative,
Normal ALT, viral load under 105
NO
***Follow patient with LFTs, alpha fetoprotein every six months.
Do we treat patient if E Antigen-Negative, Abnormal ALT, viral load greater than 105
GI referral for treatment consideration
Who are candidates for the hepatitis B vaccine?
All infants at birth, catch up all others < 19
Multiple sex partners, MSM, STDs, HIV, HCV, chronic HBV+ sexual partner
Health care workers
IV drug users
Dialysis patients
Diabetics aged 19–59 (higher incidence, poorer outcomes)
If a patient is a “non-responder” after receiving the hepatitis B vaccine series what do you do?
Full series revaccination for non-responders
Copy of antibody titer lab results to patient
What do we do with an individual exposed to hepatitis B who has written documentation of complete HBV vaccine series but no postvaccination testing
Give a booster dose of vaccine
ideally within 24 hours of exposure
What do we do with an individual exposed to hepatitis B who is in the vaccination process?
give hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) and finish vaccine series on normal schedule
What do we do with an individual exposed to hepatitis B who is unvaccinated?
Vaccine and HBIG
Simultaneous administration, separate injection sites
Vaccine series according to age-appropriate dose/schedule
What is the course of action for PEP: Unknown HBsAg exposure from needle stick or sexual contact in person who has not completed vaccine series? or unvaccinated person?
Vaccine series continued to completion: persons not fully vaccinated
Vaccine series started as soon as possible: unvaccinated persons