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Long-term immunogenicity and efficacy of hepatitis B vaccine in homosexual men.
Hadler SC,
Francis DP,
Maynard JE,
Thompson SE,
Judson FN,
Echenberg DF,
Ostrow DG,
O'Malley PM,
Penley KA,
Altman NL, et al.
To study the duration of antibody persistence and protection provided by the hepatitis B vaccine, we followed 773 homosexual men for five years after completion of vaccination. Among the 635 participants in whom antibody levels above 9.9 sample ratio units (SRU) developed after vaccination, 15 percent lost antibody altogether, and in another 27 percent, antibody levels declined below 10 SRU within five years. The extent of the maximal antibody response strongly predicted the persistence of protective antibody. Hepatitis B infection occurred in 55 men; 8 of these infections were clinically important (characterized by the presence of the hepatitis B surface antigen and elevation of liver-enzyme levels), and two of the patients became hepatitis B virus carriers. The long-term risk of hepatitis B infection was inversely related to the maximal antibody response to vaccine. Most severe infections occurred among those who responded poorly or had no response to the vaccination. The risk of late infection with hepatitis B in those with an initially adequate vaccine response increased markedly when antibody levels decreased below 10 SRU, but only 1 of 34 late infections resulted in viremia and liver inflammation. A second series of vaccinations induced a moderate antibody response in 50 percent of the subjects who initially had no response or a poor response; however, the persistence of antibody was poor. Both antibody loss and the risk of severe disease should be considered when booster-dose strategies for the hepatitis B vaccine are being designed.
PMID: 2941687 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Cited by 37 PubMed Central articles
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Independent clinical predictors of impaired response to hepatitis B vaccination in HIV-infected persons.
Kim HN, Harrington RD, Van Rompaey SE, Kitahata MM.
Int J STD AIDS. 2008 Sep; 19(9):600-4.
[Int J STD AIDS. 2008]
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Randomized controlled trial of Hepatitis B virus vaccine in HIV-1-infected patients comparing two different doses.
Cornejo-Juárez P, Volkow-Fernández P, Escobedo-López K, Vilar-Compte D, Ruiz-Palacios G, Soto-Ramírez LE.
AIDS Res Ther. 2006 Apr 6; 3:9. Epub 2006 Apr 6.
[AIDS Res Ther. 2006]
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ReviewEffect of hepatitis B immunisation in newborn infants of mothers positive for hepatitis B surface antigen: systematic review and meta-analysis.
Lee C, Gong Y, Brok J, Boxall EH, Gluud C.
BMJ. 2006 Feb 11; 332(7537):328-36. Epub 2006 Jan 27.
[BMJ. 2006]
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