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Seroepidemiologic Study of Spermatozoal Transmission of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV)

Y

YiYang Zhu

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hepatitis B

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01574521
tz2008032

Details and patient eligibility

About

Animal experiments demonstrated that father might transmit HBV vertically via male germ line, however, whether it is really existed in human remains to be determined. Since HBV is a blood-borne virus, the unvaccinated pregnant women would be at risk for HBV exposure if their fetuses carried the virus from fathers. If women had been vaccinated for HBV before conception, what would happen to a maternal immune system if her fetus carried HBV from spermatozoa? However, the literature on transmission of HBV by spermatozoa in vivo is rare, the viral replicating status and fetal immune response in uterus are unknown. The aim of study was to detect father-to-fetus transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in uterus.

Full description

Transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) from mother-to-infant is the predominant route in most high prevalence areas such as China. However, father-to-child transmission also plays another important role in the prevalence of hepatitis B. Children infected with HBV from their carrier fathers would be horizontally by postnatal intimate contact or vertically via male germ line. The latter is considered an intrauterine infection, however, whether it is really existed in human remains to be determined.

In past decades, several experiments reported there presences of integrated HBV DNA in human spermatozoal chromosomes. Studies on embryos hybridized with mammalian ova and human spermatozoa were also confirmed that sperm-integrated HBV DNA can replicate and express the HBV protein in two-cell' hybrid embryos. All above findings demonstrated that father might transmit HBV to fetus by spermatozoa in theory.

Since HBV is a blood-borne virus, the unvaccinated pregnant women would be at risk for HBV exposure if their fetuses carried the virus from fathers. On other hand, maternal antibodies can pass through the placenta and enter the fetal circulation freely. If women had been vaccinated for HBV before conception, thus some attractive questions are raised that what would happen to a maternal immune system if her fetus carried HBV from spermatozoa? Would the fetus be passive immunized by hepatitis B immunoglobulin leaked from maternal circulation? However, the literature on transmission of HBV by spermatozoa in vivo is rare, the viral replicating status and fetal immune response in uterus are unknown. Only one study had detected HBV DNA and serological makers on eight aborted fetuses suspected with HBV transmission via spermatozoa, but it is a small sample study and the maternal serological status is uncertain.

Specimens applied for evaluating intrauterine infection include amniotic fluids, placental tissue and neonatal peripheral blood. Because postnatal sample is inevitably to be contaminated by maternal blood during delivery, it would be useless to determine the time when the infection was occurred (before or during the partum). A better alternative is detecting fetal infection before the partum by prenatal diagnostic technique. Comparing to the postnatal specimens, intrauterine specimens obtained from amniocentesis or cordocentesis can minimize the contamination of maternal blood. It is also a safety technique and the risk of nosocomial infection caused by invasive procedures is very low. The aim of this study was to investigate the fetal hepatitis B seroepidemiology by prenatal diagnostic technique and to find the evidence of HBV vertical transmission via spermatozoa.

Enrollment

407 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

16 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • one or both of pregnant Woman and her husband were HBV carriers
  • indicated for amniocentesis or cordocentesis

Exclusion criteria

  • indicated for chorionic villous sampling

Trial design

407 participants in 3 patient groups

Only father carrier
Description:
fetuses whose fathers were HBV carriers whereas mothers negatively.
only mother carrier
Description:
fetuses whose mothers were HBV carriers whereas fathers negatively.
both parents carriers
Description:
fetuses whose both parents were HBV carriers

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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