This is the most prevalent form of viral hepatitis worldwide, and is the leading cause of liver cancer globally. An estimated 250 million people live with hepatitis B worldwide, and up to one quarter will die as a result of their infection without effective care. Around 230,000 Australians are thought to be living with chronic hepatitis B.
Most people living with chronic (long-term) hepatitis B acquired it at birth early in life. Following infection, the chance of developing chronic hepatitis B in infancy is around 90%, but falls to 5% among adults. A safe and highly effective vaccine has been available for hepatitis B since the 1980s. It has been provided for all infants born in Australia since May 2000. Globally, the program has prevented millions of deaths from liver cancer and liver cirrhosis. Hepatitis B can be transmitted from person to person through sex or blood-to-blood contact. Hepatitis B cannot be transmitted through hugging, kissing, sharing food and utensils for eating, insect bites, coughing, sharing bathroom and toilet facilities, or swimming pools. In some countries, hepatitis B is still transmitted via use of unsterile medical equipment or transfusion of unsafe blood.
Vaccination for all infants is recommended in Australia and the majority of countries globally, with coverage in 2017 reaching 84% of all children. In Australia, vaccination is also recommended for adults at greater risk of infection including household and sexual contacts of people living with hepatitis B; people who inject drugs; and health care workers.
Effective antiviral treatments are also available for chronic hepatitis B. These can prevent liver damage and liver cancer from occuring. But even in a well-resourced country such as Australia, only a minority of people needing treatment and care for hepatitis B are receiving it and there is high variation in uptake according to region within Australia. In 2015 WHO released guidelines for treatment and care of hepatitis B which provide the essential framework for developing treatment and care programs across all settings. Active research into cures for hepatitis B infection is underway.