Skip to content

The Antiviral Therapy in Pregnant Women to Reduce Mother-to-infant Transmission of Hepatitis B Virus-drug Test

The Effectiveness and Feasibility of Using Antiviral Therapy in Pregnant Women to Reduce Mother-to-infant Transmission of Hepatitis B Virus-drug Test and Follow-up Study

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01312012
Enrollment
120
Registered
2011-03-10
Start date
2011-01-31
Completion date
2021-12-31
Last updated
2020-11-27

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hepatitis B Virus Infection, Pregnancy

Keywords

hepatitis B virus,mother-infant transmission, nucleoside analog,pregnant women

Brief summary

Since the implementation of universal vaccination in 1984, the chronic HBV carier rate in our general population reduced from 15-20%, down to \< 1% in the post-vaccination population. However, children born to HBeAg positive mothers still may be infected with HBV despite immunization. To further reducing the HBV infection in our people, strategies in reducing infection rate in this high risk group are mandatory. Previous small scale studies using lamivudine treatment in pregnant woman in the third trimester has proved effective in reducing children infection rate. The aims of the present study are to conduct a clinical trial in using Tenofovir (category B) to reduce mother-to-infant transmission, and to monitor the hepaitits B viral status and mother hepatitis occurrence. The clinical trials will screen cases of HBsAg positive pregnant women aged 20 to 40 years at gestational at 20-32 weeks. They will be tested for HBsAg and HBeAg. In whom both markers are positive, HBV viral load will be tested. An estimated 180 pregnant women with high HBV viral load (\>10\^8 copies/mL) will be recruited in the study; including 80-100 subjects treated with Tenofovir 300 mg daily starting from 30-32 weeks of gestation (3rd trimester) and continued to 1 month after delivery; and 80-100 pregnant women are enrolled as controls with no drug given to the mother. The newborn babies are given with HBIG within 24 hours after delivery, and HBV vaccines at 0, 1 and 6 months. Maternal complete blood count (CBC) data tested in the first prenatal examination will be recorded. Plasma AST、ALT levels and HBV DNA are tested before Tenofovir treatment, 1 month after treatment, at the time of delivery, and at 1, 2, 4 and 6 months after delivery. HBsAg、HBeAg、anti-HBs and AST、ALT are tested in the children at day 1, 6 moths and 1 year after birth. The primary outcome is reduction of the HBsAg carrier rate of the children at 6 months of age. The secondary outcome is HBsAg carrier rate of the children at 12 months of age, the change of liver function, HBeAg, and viral load in pregnant mother after treatment. A follow-up study for investigating safety of mothers and children that has been exposed to maternal tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) during pregnancy in reducing mother-to-infant hepatitis B virus (HBV) transmissions is conducted. The follow-up study included mother-children pairs 2-4 years after delivery of the children.

Interventions

100-120 pregnant women seropositive for both HBeAg and HBsAg and with hepatitis B viral DNA level \> 10 8 copies/mL. Among them, 55-65 pregnant women will receive TDF therapy 300 mg once daily, starting from the gestational age 30-32 (the 3rd trimester) until 4 weeks after delivery of the neonate under informed consent. The total treatment duration will be 3-4 months. Another 45-55 pregnant women with the same serum HBAg and HBsAg and HBV DNA status will be enrolled as the control group with no TDF therapy ( An open-labeled study)

Sponsors

National Taiwan University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
20 Years to 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

\- pregnant women in 30 to 32 weeks of gestation, with positive HBsAg and HBeAg,serum viral load above 8log10 copies per mL

Exclusion criteria

* major systemic disease * Pregnant woman with infection of human immunodeficiency virus or hepatitis C virus * Pregnant woman is receiving any drug with antiviral activity or any form of drug therapy for hepatitis B virus * Pregnant woman whose ultrasonographic examination reveals congenital anomaly of the fetus * Pregnant woman whose amniocentesis reveals any genetic abnormality

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Child-HBsAg6 months after deliveryserum status of HBsAg of the infants at 6 months old( \>180 days).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Children growth parameters0-5 years after birthbody weight and length Z score according to age
Children HBV status0-5 years after birthHBsAg and anti-HBs positivity rates
Children serum biochemistry0-5 years after birthRates of abnormal levels of serum ALT(U/L), creatinine (mg/dL) and calcium (mmol/L)
Child HBsAg12 months after birthSerum HBsAg positivity of the infants at 12 months old, to see whether this child indeed becomes a chronic carrier of HBV.
Maternal ALT elevationdelivery to 5 years after deliveryThe extent (folds of upper limit of normal, ULN) of ALT elevation and duration.
Maternal HBV DNAdelivery to 5 years after deliveryChange of levels of HBV DNA (log IU/mL) from baseline
Children bone growth2-5 years after birthcomparisons of BAP levels(U/L) and bone density (DEXA) between control and treatment group
Maternal HBeAg seroconversion ratedelivery to 5 years after deliveryMaternal HBeAg seroconversion rate, the time of HBeAg (+) to convert to HBeAg(-) after delivery

Countries

Taiwan

Contacts

Primary ContactMei-Hwei Chang, PhD
changmh@ntu.edu.tw886-02-23123456
Backup ContactHuey-Ling Chen, PhD
hueyling@ntu.edu.tw886-02-23123456

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 28, 2026