Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2403518 Vaccine 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Hepatitis B surveillance in China mixes chronic and acute cases.•Mixing acute and chronic cases prevent identification of acute cases.•Clinicians must be trained to diagnose acute hepatitis.•Access and use of validated IgM anti-HBc tests must be improved.•Improved data analysis technique could sort out acute from chronic cases.

BackgroundAs the WHO verified that China reached the target of 1% prevalence of chronic hepatitis B infection among children targeted by universal hepatitis B immunization of newborns, the country considered new options for hepatitis B prevention and control. We reviewed hepatitis B surveillance in the broader context of viral hepatitis surveillance to propose recommendations to improve the system.MethodsWe described surveillance for viral hepatitis in China with a specific focus on hepatitis B. We assessed critical attributes of the system, including data quality, predictive positive value and usefulness.ResultsWhile remarkable progress in hepatitis B immunization of infants and children has likely almost eliminated transmission in younger age groups, reported rates of hepatitis B increased steadily in China between 1990 and 2008, probably because of a failure to distinguish acute from chronic infections. Elements that prevented a clearer separation between acute and chronic cases included (1) missed opportunity to report cases accurately among clinicians, (2) low availability and use of tests to detect IgM against the hepatitis B core antigen (IgM anti-HBc) and (3) lack of systems to sort, manage and analyze surveillance data.ConclusionsTo improve hepatitis B surveillance, China may consider (1) training clinicians to diagnose acute cases and to use IgM anti-HBc to confirm them, (2) improving access and use of validated IgM anti-HBc tests and (3) developing data management and analysis techniques that sort out acute from chronic cases.

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