Background: Vertical hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission and persistence of anti-HCV antibodies were retrospectively investigated since 1999 in a group of 244 children whose mothers had a history of hepatitis C.

Material And Methods: Initial examinations performed in most children at 6 months of age included the determination of anti-HCV antibodies, HCV nucleic acid (HCV RNA), and anti-HIV antibodies, with all children being negative for HIV. Further examinations with investigation of anti-HCV and HCV RNA were performed at half-year intervals until the disappearance of anti-HCV antibodies. Vertical HCV transmission was defined by HCV RNA positivity in at least 2 venous blood samples or at least two positive anti-HCV results in a child over 3 years of age.

Results: Vertical HCV transmission was detected in 11 out of 244 children (4.5%). Only 2 children spontaneously cleared HCV; positive anti-HCV antibodies were last detected when they were 8 years old. Chronic hepatitis C developed in 9 children, four of whom were infected with genotype 1b, 3 children with genotype 3a, one with genotype 1a, and the last one with genotypes 1a and 4. Antiviral treatment including conventional or pegylated interferon, or ribavirin, was administered to 3 children, with sustained elimination of the virus in 2 children. Although the proportion of children with positive anti-HCV antibodies declined gradually, anti-HCV positivity was reported in 6 uninfected children at 18 months of age but in none of them at the age of 2 years.

Conclusions: Vertical transmission of HCV was found in 11 out of 244 children; chronic hepatitis C was detected in 9 children; uninfected children cleared anti-HCV antibodies by 2 years of age.

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