Background: With respect to the importance of hepatitis B
vaccination of high-risk groups such as prisoners, this study was performed to assess
the comparability of a short-course double-dose vaccination schedule with the
standard 3-dose schedule.
Methods : Within a randomized clinical trial, a short-course vaccination (at months 0
and 1) with 20
microgram (double-dose) doses of the vaccine was compared to the standard
method of hepatitis B vaccination (at
months 0, 1 and 6,
with 10-microgram doses) in 100
prisoners in Zahedan city in Iran in 2009.
We made sure the sera from all the individuals were negative for markers of
previous hepatitis B infection. Subsequently
serum from all the participants was tested for anti-HBs
antibody 1, 2 and 7
months after the first dose of vaccination.
Results : Seroconversion rates (HBsAb>10
mIU/ml) 1, 2
and 7 months after the first dose of vaccination
were similar in the routine (11%, 79% and 94%,
respectively) relative to the double-dose group (26%, 95% and
93 %, respectively). The mean values of anti-HBs
antibody titers were similar in the 1st and 2nd
months for the two groups but it was significantly higher (P=0.002)
in the routine dose (514 mIU/ml)
versus the double-dose group (130 mIU/mL),
in the 7th month.
Conclusion: Demonstrating
comparable results with the standard 3-dose
schedule, it seems that short-term double-dose vaccination for hepatitis B is
a safe and acceptable method for use in high-risk groups such as prisoners.
Rights and permissions | |
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. |