When are Hep B booster vaccinations required, and how should it be administered?

Doctor's Answers 1

Photo of Dr Wai Leong Quan
Dr Wai Leong Quan

Gastroenterologist

Hi Kit Kit,

The vaccinations which your children received obviously have not been proven to produce any protective antibodies yet. This suggest there is either no antibody production at all (i.e. non-responder) or antibodies at too low a level to be detected by routine methods after some years.

One commonly employed way to distinguish the two is to provide a booster dose given as an injection and to check for the protective antibodies 1 month later.

A person having a low antibody level with previous vaccination will usually mount a response to produce detectable antibodies this time while the non-responders will not. Once antibodies are detected to be above the threshold level with the booster injection, no further action is required.

For a non-responder, a 2nd vaccination cycle which include 2 more doses (the 2nd and 3rd 'booster' doses) will be required to hopefully induce a response. To avoid any confusion, some doctors may advise a 2nd vaccination cycle straight away skipping the booster trial. This explains the different protocols you mentioned.

- Dr Quan

Similar Questions

What are the implications if I am a non-responder to the hepatitis B vaccination?

Just to add on to the advice Dr Ti has provided, non-responders who have a strong family history of Hepatitis B carrier status should be aware of this entity known as "occult Hepatitis B" infection. This is a rare condition in which routine Hepatitis B surface protein test (aka HBsAg) is negative yet the person is actually a Hepatitis B carrier. This is the reason why repeated vaccination attempts will not induce antibody formation in that person since he or she is already infected with the virus.

Photo of Dr Wai Leong Quan

Answered By

Dr Wai Leong Quan

Gastroenterologist

What could be the cause of a brown band on my nail? (photo)

Thank you for getting in touch with us. These brown lines are usually the result of pigments being deposited right below where the nail is growing. The medical term is melanonychia. There can be quite a long list of possible causes for this. But most of the time it is not something dangerous. You should check it out with your GP or skin specialist. What we would do is to take a close look at the nail and the skin around it with a "dermascope", or a good magnifying glass to advice you further. Take Care.

Photo of Dr Paul Ang

Answered By

Dr Paul Ang

General Practitioner

Ask any health question for free

I’m not so sure about a procedure...

Ask Icon Ask a Question

Join Human

Sign up now for a free Human account to get answers from specialists in Singapore.

Sign Up

Get The Pill

Be healthier with our Bite-sized health news straight in your inbox