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Qiumei Pang

Capital Medical University

Publishes on Hepatitis B Virus Studies, Hepatitis C virus research, Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment. 11 papers and 1.4k citations.

11Publications
1.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Expert consensus for managing pregnant women and neonates born to mothers with suspected or confirmed novel coronavirus (<scp>COVID</scp>‐19) infection
Dunjin Chen, Huixia Yang, Yun Cao et al.|International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics|2020
Cited by 278Open Access

OBJECTIVE: To provide clinical management guidelines for novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in pregnancy. METHODS: On February 5, 2020, a multidisciplinary teleconference comprising Chinese physicians and researchers was held and medical management strategies of COVID-19 infection in pregnancy were discussed. RESULTS: Ten key recommendations were provided for the management of COVID-19 infections in pregnancy. CONCLUSION: Currently, there is no clear evidence regarding optimal delivery timing, the safety of vaginal delivery, or whether cesarean delivery prevents vertical transmission at the time of delivery; therefore, route of delivery and delivery timing should be individualized based on obstetrical indications and maternal-fetal status.

Telbivudine or lamivudine use in late pregnancy safely reduces perinatal transmission of hepatitis B virus in real-life practice
Hua Zhang, Calvin Q. Pan, Qiumei Pang et al.|Hepatology|2014
Cited by 201Open Access

UNLABELLED: Little observational data exist describing telbivudine (LdT) or lamivudine (LAM) use in late pregnancy for preventing hepatitis B mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) in real-world settings. During the period of January 2009 to March 2011, we enrolled hepatitis B e antigen-positive mothers with HBV DNA >6 log10 copies/mL in China. At gestation week 28, the mothers received LdT or LAM until postpartum week 4 or no treatment (NTx). The study endpoints were the safety of LdT/LAM use and MTCT rates. Of the 700 mothers enrolled, 648 (LdT/LAM/NTx=252/51/345) completed the 52-week study with 661 infants (LdT/LAM/NTx=257/52/352). On treatment, viral rebound occurred in 1.6% of mothers, all resulting from medication noncompliance. There was no genotypic mutation detected. At delivery, significantly lower HBV DNA levels were noted in mothers who received LdT or LAM versus NTx. Alanine aminotransferase flares were observed in 17.1% of treated mothers versus 6.3% of untreated mothers (P < 0.001). At birth, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) was detected in 20% and 24% of newborns in the treated and NTx groups, respectively. At week 52, an intention-to-treat analysis indicated 2.2% (95% confidence [CI]: 0.6-3.8) of HBsAg+ infants from the treated group versus 7.6% (95% CI: 4.9-10.3) in the NTx group (P50.001) and no difference of HBsAg+ rate between infants in the LdT and LAM groups(1.9% vs. 3.7%; P=0.758). On-treatment analysis indicated 0% of HBsAg+ infants in the treated group versus 2.84% in the NTx group (P=0.002). There were no differences for gestational age or infants' height, weight, Apgar scores, or birth defect rates between infants from the treated and untreated groups. CONCLUSIONS: LdT and LAM use in late pregnancy for highly viremic mothers was equally effective in reducing MTCT. The treatment was well tolerated with no safety concerns identified.

Vaginal delivery report of a healthy neonate born to a convalescent mother with COVID‐19
Xiali Xiong, Hong Wei, Zhihong Zhang et al.|Journal of Medical Virology|2020
Cited by 113Open Access

The outbreak of the infection of 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID--19) has become a challenging public health threat worldwide. Limited data are available for pregnant women with COVID-19 pneumonia. We report a case of a convalescing pregnant woman diagnosed with COVID-19 infection 37 days before delivery in the third trimester. A live birth without severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection was performed successfully via the vagina. The findings from our case indicate that there is no intrauterine transmission in this woman who developed COVID-19 pneumonia in late pregnancy.

Real‐world study of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate to prevent hepatitis B transmission in mothers with high viral load
Ming Wang, Qian Bian, Yunxia Zhu et al.|Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics|2018
Cited by 48Open Access

BACKGROUND: Data on tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) therapy for preventing vertical transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in the real-world setting are limited. AIM: To investigate TDF for preventing vertical transmission of HBV in real-world practice. METHODS: IU/mL to receive TDF between gestational weeks 24-33 and delivery were prospectively enrolled and followed until post-partum week 28. All infants received immunoprophylaxis. Primary endpoints were safety of TDF use and mother-to-child transmission rates. Secondary outcomes were maternal HBV-DNA level suppression (<200 000 IU/mL) at delivery and HBeAg and hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) serologic changes during the study. RESULTS: Among 147 mothers enrolled, 143 started TDF and 143/144 infants completed the study. At delivery, 93.7% (134/143) of the mothers achieved HBV-DNA<200 000 IU/L. On-treatment, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) flares were observed in 8.4% (12/143) of mothers. After TDF cessation, ALT increased in 7.7% (11/143) of the mothers and 2.8% (4/143) achieved HBeAg negativity, but none had HBsAg loss. At birth, HBsAg was detected in 13.9% (20/144) of newborns and none at post-partum week 28. Vertical transmission rates among infants were 0.7% (1/144, intention-to-treat) and 0% (per-protocol). No infants had birth defects. No serious adverse effects were reported in either mothers or infants. Breastfeeding did not increase the HBV infection rate among infants although mothers had viral rebound after TDF cessation. CONCLUSIONS: TDF for highly viraemic mothers was well tolerated and reduced vertical transmission of HBV in a real-world setting. There were no safety concerns during the postpartum 28-week follow-up. Registry number: Chinese Clinical Trial Registration No. ChiCTR-OIC-17010869.