Mother-to-infant transmission of hepatitis C virus: A prospective study

Abstract
To investigate the risk of mother-to-infant transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and the natural course of HCV-infected infants, we prospectively studied 31 offspring of pregnant women who were anti-HCV positive and anti-HIV negative. Sera were serially tested for anti-HCV by the second-generation ELISA-test (ELISA-2) and for HCV-RNA by the polymerase chain reaction procedure. The mean period of follow up was 19 months (range 6–41 months). The presence of HCV-RNA in the mothers was associated with a high titre of anti-HCV by ELISA-2 or a positivity of the second generation recombinant immunoblot assay. At birth, 26 babies were positive for anti-HCV. Passively transferred maternal antibodies became undetectable within 2–15 months. HCV-RNA was detected in only 3 infants (9.7%) within 1–4 weeks after birth and persisted there-after. The genotype of HCV-RNA in each of the infants was consistent with that of their mother. These 3 showed chronic transaminase elevation during the follow up that started at 1–2 months of age, although they revealed no clinical symptoms. Re-elevation of anti-HCV titre was observed in the HCV-infected infants within 10 months of age, suggesting an endogenous production of anti-HCV. The mean titre of HCV-RNA in three mothers of infected infants was higher than that in the mothers of uninfected infants (105.3±0.3 vs 104.4±0.2/ml).