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Racial/ethnic disparities in the prevalence and awareness of Hepatitis B virus infection and immunity in the United States
Author(s) -
Kim H. S.,
Rotundo L.,
Yang J. D.,
Kim D.,
Kothari N.,
Feurdean M.,
Ruhl C.,
Unalparida A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of viral hepatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.329
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1365-2893
pISSN - 1352-0504
DOI - 10.1111/jvh.12735
Subject(s) - medicine , hepatitis b virus , logistic regression , national health and nutrition examination survey , vaccination , odds ratio , immunity , serology , hepatitis b , ethnic group , demography , immunology , environmental health , virus , antibody , population , immune system , sociology , anthropology
Summary Hepatitis B virus ( HBV ) infection in the United States is the most common among Asians followed by non‐Hispanic blacks. However, there have been few studies that describe HBV infection and immunity by racial group. Our study aimed to assess racial/ethnic disparities in the prevalence and awareness of HBV infection and immunity using nationally representative data. In the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011‐2014, 14 722 persons had HBV serology testing. We estimated the prevalence of HBV infection, past exposure, and immunity by selected characteristics and calculated adjusted odds ratios using survey‐weighted generalized logistic regression. Awareness of infection and vaccination history was also investigated. The overall prevalence of chronic HBV infection, past exposure and vaccine‐induced immunity was 0.34% [95% CI 0.24‐0.43], 4.30% [95% CI 3.80‐4.81], and 24.4% [95% CI 23.4‐25.4], respectively. The prevalence of chronic infection was 2.74% [95% CI 1.72‐3.76] in Asians, 0.64% [95% CI 0.35‐0.92] in non‐Hispanic blacks, and 0.15% [95% CI 0.06‐0.24] in non‐Asian, non‐blacks. Only 26.2% of those with chronic infection were aware of their infection. The prevalence of the past exposure was 21.5% [95% CI 19.3‐23.7] in Asians, 8.92% [95% CI 7.84‐9.99] in non‐Hispanic blacks, 2.05% [95% CI 1.49‐2.63] in non‐Hispanic whites and 4.47% [95% CI 3.25‐5.70] in Hispanics. Prevalence of vaccine‐induced immunity by each race was 34.1% [95% CI : 32.0‐36.2] in Asians, 25.5% [95% CI : 24.0‐27.0] in non‐Hispanic blacks, 24.0% [95% CI : 22.6‐25.4] in non‐Hispanic whites and 22.2% [95% CI : 21.3‐23.3] in Hispanics. There are considerable racial/ethnic disparities in HBV infection, exposure and immunity. More active and sophisticated healthcare policies on HBV management may be warranted.