Viral Hepatitis B Infected Pregnant Female
Reportable by Laboratories and ProvidersAbout this Reportable Disease
Infectious agent: Hepatitis B virus
Description of illness: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a pregnant woman poses a serious risk to her infant at birth. Without post-exposure prophylaxis, approximately 40% of infants born to HBV-infected mothers in the United States will develop chronic HBV infection, approximately one-fourth of whom will eventually die from chronic liver disease. Administering post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) of hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) and a dose of hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of life is 85%–95% effective in preventing mother-to-child transmission of HBV. For this reason, reporting is required for each incidence of pregnancy, even if the woman is already known to be chronically infected.
Interactive Disease Data
Laboratory Reporting for this Disease
Hepatitis B
| TEST NAME | Hepatitis B |
| DISEASE/DISORDER | Hepatitis B |
| ALTERNATE NAME(S) | Hep B, HBV, HBsAg, HBsAb, anti-HB(s) |
| METHODOLOGY | Chemiluminescent Microparticle Immunoassay (CMIA) on the Abbott Architect Analyzer |
| SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS | Hepatitis B Panel includes HBV surface antibody, surface antigen, and total Core antibodies. |
| ORDERING INFORMATION | Lab Web Portal PTBMIS: - Test Order Code: HEPB |
Specimen Requirements
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- Whole blood in serum separator tube (SST) - Whole blood in serum coagulation tube (red top) |
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Laboratory Reporting
Reporting requirements apply to all laboratories located within Tennessee, as well as laboratories outside of Tennessee that test residents of Tennessee, including laboratories located within healthcare facilities. Healthcare providers and laboratories in the same healthcare facility both have a duty to report. The type of organisms and analytes laboratories must report to TDH for 2026 are indicated, and there are several ways laboratories can report results to TDH.
- Manually report results to TDH by faxing or mailing a completed PH-1600 form to your local health department, or faxing to the state health office at (615) 741-3857
- Automatically submit results to TDH via electronic laboratory reporting (ELR), which automates the process of sharing data with TDH using interoperability standards.
- See the ELR Onboarding Handbook for details on the onboarding process, checklist, frequently asked questions, business rules, message format, and vocabulary.
- To initiate the ELR onboarding process with TDH, register in the Trading Partner Registration (TPR) system TPR provides documentation for Promoting Interoperability (PI) attestation and milestone letters to document onboarding progress. Contact MU.Health@tn.gov for assistance.
- Submit online via NBS. NBS is TDH's reportable disease system. To request an NBS account for reporting Complete this user survey to request an NBS account for reporting.
- Blood lead levels can be sent via fax ( (615) 741-3857), entered online, or reported using the instructions at this link.
Information about this Reportable Disease for Healthcare Providers
Clinical Summary
- Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection during pregnancy is a major concern because transmission can occur at delivery, and infection acquired in infancy is more likely to become chronic and lead to serious liver disease later in life.
- Care begins with prenatal identification and coordination. CDC emphasizes confirming infection (e.g., hepatitis B surface antigen [HBsAg] positive) and ensuring the pregnant patient is connected to perinatal hepatitis B prevention case management so the infant’s prophylaxis and follow-up are not missed.
- Newborn prophylaxis must happen immediately. For infants born to an HBsAg-positive parent, CDC recommends hepatitis B vaccine and hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) as soon as possible after birth (and Tennessee resources emphasize within 12 hours) to prevent perinatal transmission.
- Reporting and infant follow-up are required to protect the baby. Tennessee classifies perinatal HBV infection as reportable and requires reporting for each pregnancy involving an HBV-infected pregnant patient; CDC also describes ongoing infant follow-up (including completion of the vaccine series and post-vaccination testing) through perinatal hepatitis B prevention programs.
Healthcare Provider Reporting
Healthcare reporting requirements apply to all providers located within Tennessee, as well as providers whose patients reside in Tennessee.
Providers must report cases of all diseases and conditions listed through one of these methods:
• Mail or fax a completed PH-1600 form to your local health department or fax to the state health office at (615) 741-3857
• Send automatically via electronic case reporting (eCR). See this TDH webpage for more information on eCR, register at the Trader Partner Registration website, or contact MU.Health@tn.gov for assistance.
• Submit online via NBS. NBS is TDH's reportable disease system. To request an NBS account for reporting Complete this user survey to request an NBS account for reporting.
• Blood lead levels can be sent via fax ( (615) 741-3857), entered online, or reported using the instructions at this link.
Information about this Reportable Disease for the Public
What It Is?
Hepatitis B is a liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). If a pregnant woman has HBV, the virus can be passed to the baby, most often at delivery. Babies who become infected are much more likely to develop chronic (lifelong) HBV infection, which can later lead to serious liver disease, including cirrhosis or liver cancer.
How Hepatitis B Can Spread to a Baby
HBV can pass from an infected pregnant woman to the baby during pregnancy and at delivery. Because this risk is well known and preventable, CDC recommends hepatitis B screening during each pregnancy so that protection for the newborn can be planned right away.
Protecting the Baby at Birth
If the pregnant woman is known (or suspected) to have HBV, CDC recommends the newborn receive both hepatitis B vaccine and hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) as soon as possible after birth—these work best when given within 12 hours. The baby will also need the remaining hepatitis B vaccine doses on schedule to complete the series.
Follow-up After Birth
After the vaccine series is completed, CDC recommends post-vaccination blood testing (HBsAg and anti-HBs) to confirm the baby is protected and not infected. This testing is generally done at 9–12 months of age (and at least 1–2 months after the final vaccine dose).
What Pregnant Women Can Do Now
If you are pregnant, ask your healthcare provider if you were tested for hepatitis B (HBsAg) during this pregnancy. If you have HBV, make sure your delivery team knows, and confirm plans for your baby to receive hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG right after birth, plus follow-up testing later in infancy.
This Page Last Updated: March 25, 2026 at 8:53 PM