Pregnancy and pregnancy outcome in hepatitis C type 1b

被引:44
作者
Jabeen, T
Cannon, B
Hogan, J
Crowley, M
Devereux, C
Fanning, L
Kenny-Walsh, E
Shanahan, F
Whelton, MJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Crok Univ Hosp, Dept Med, Cork, Ireland
[2] Crok Univ Hosp, Dept Pathol, Cork, Ireland
[3] Crok Univ Hosp, Dept Stat, Cork, Ireland
[4] Univ Coll Cork, Cork, Ireland
关键词
D O I
10.1093/qjmed/93.9.597
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
A large cohort of rhesus-negative women in Ireland were inadvertently infected with hepatitis C virus following exposure to contaminated anti-D immunoglobulin in 1977-8. This major iatrogenic episode was discovered in 1994. We studied 36 women who had been infected after their first pregnancy, and compared them to an age- and parity-matched control group of rhesus-positive women. The presence of hepatitis C antibody was confirmed in all 36 by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and by recombinant immunoblot assay, while 26 (72%) of the cohort were HCV-RNA-positive (type 1b) on PCR testing. In the 20 years post-infection, all members of the study group had at least one pregnancy, and mean parity was 3.5. They had a total of 100 pregnancies and 85 of these went to term. There were four premature births, one being a twin pregnancy, and 11 spontaneous miscarriages. One miscarriage occurred in the pregnancy following HCV infection. There were two neonatal deaths due to severe congenital abnormalities in the PCR-positive women. Of the children born to HCV-RNA positive mothers, only one (2.3%) tested positive for the virus. Significant portal fibrosis on liver biopsy was confined to HCV-RNA-positive mothers apart from one single exception in the antibody-positive HCV-RNA-negative group. Comparison with the control group showed no increase in spontaneous miscarriage rate, and no significant difference in obstetric complications; birth weights were similar for the two groups.
引用
收藏
页码:597 / 601
页数:5
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