Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In Italy, a program of vaccination against hepatitis B targeted at the immunisation of persons at high risk began in 1983. In 1991, vaccination became mandatory for all newborns and adolescents. Since then, the vaccine has been given to more than 10 million children, with an outstanding record of safety and efficacy. The coverage rate is globally around 94%, with differences between the Northern and Southern regions, with the latter having the lower acceptance rate. According to the National Surveillance System (SEIEVA), the incidence of acute hepatitis B per 10(5) inhabitants declined from 5.4 in 1990 to 2 in 2000. The reduction was even greater among 15-24-year-old individuals, where the incidence rate per 10(5) decreased from 17.3 to 2 in the same period. In parallel with the decline of hepatitis B, hepatitis delta has also declined significantly. Catch-up immunisation of unvaccinated adolescents, as well as an effort to improve the vaccination coverage rate in high-risk groups, are required to ameliorate the efficacy of the vaccination campaign. Routine administration of booster doses of vaccine is not considered necessary to sustain immunity in immunocompetent persons.
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PMID:Hepatitis B in Italy: where we are ten years after the introduction of mass vaccination. 1211 41

The vaccination against hepatitis B has been shown to be effective and safe. 15 years after a scare suggesting a relationship between the HBV vaccine and the development of demyelinating diseases, studies have not confirmed this suspected link. The french HBV vaccination strategy in effect since the 1990's (vaccination of newborns, a catch-up campaign in children and adolescents and vaccination of high risk populations) is well adapted to the existing epidemiological situation. Vaccination coverage in newborns has increased significantly since 2008. Catch-up of children and adolescents is insufficient. The very limited data on vaccination coverage in populations at high risk of HBV suggests that coverage is largely insufficient. The mandatory vaccination of healthcare workers since 1991 has nearly completely eradicated worksite HBV. Nevertheless: persistent circulation of the virus and the risk of healthcare worker-patient transmission, and insufficient coverage justifies continued vaccination and mandatory proof of immunization. Specific vaccination protocols are needed because certain co-morbidities can reduce the probability and strength of the response to the vaccine. The physician should evaluate this risk case-by-case and adapt the vaccination protocol accordingly. Between 2007 and 2012, more than 200 patients have undergone liver transplantation associated with HBV (cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, fulminant hepatitis). Many of these transplantations could have been avoided thanks to vaccination, and these grafts could have been proposed to other patients.
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PMID:[VACCINATION AGAINST HEPATITIS B: WHAT'S UP?]. 2661 34