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Routine antenatal screening for hepatitis B using pooled sera: validation and review of 10 years experience.
  1. R Cunningham,
  2. J L Northwood,
  3. C D Kelly,
  4. E H Boxall,
  5. N J Andrews
  1. Plymouth Public Health Laboratory, Derriford Hospital, UK. richard.cunningham@phnt.swest.nhs.uk

    Abstract

    AIMS: To validate the sensitivity of universal antenatal screening for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) by testing pools of 10 sera, and to review 10 years' experience using this method. METHODS: 66,945 antenatal patients were tested between 1986 and 1996 using the pooled method. All sera from 1996 (n = 6050) were retrieved and retrospectively tested individually. An in vitro determination of the effect of pooling on sensitivity was performed by checkerboard neutralisation assay. RESULTS: 26 HBsAg positive women were detected by universal screening over 10 years; 12 had non-European surnames and five had known risk factors for hepatitis B infection. High titre anti-HBs sera in the pool reduced the sensitivity of the HBsAg assay, though the effect was only significant at low levels of HBsAg carriage. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of hepatitis B is extremely low in the antenatal population served by Plymouth PHL. Pooling is unlikely to reduce sensitivity enough to lead to significant preventable vertical transmission, and is a cost-effective and valid strategy in areas of low seroprevalence.

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