Blood-bank testing for infectious diseases: how safe is blood transfusion?

TitleBlood-bank testing for infectious diseases: how safe is blood transfusion?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsStrong DM, Katz L
JournalTrends Mol Med
Volume8
Issue7
Pagination355 - 8
Date PublishedJul
ISSN1471-4914 (Print) 1471-4914 (Linking)
Accession Number12114117
KeywordsBlood Banks / *standards, Blood Transfusion / *adverse effects / standards, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Hepatitis C / prevention & control / transmission, HIV Infections / prevention & control / transmission, Humans, Laboratories, Hospital / *standards
Abstract

Remarkable progress has been made in transfusion safety from infection over the past three decades. Donor deferrals for at-risk behaviors, the introduction of more-sensitive viral-screening assays and the recent introduction of nucleic-acid amplification technology have nearly eliminated transmission of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) by blood transfusion in North America. Nevertheless, risks of other infectious agents for which such robust screening tools have not been developed, such as bacteria and parasites, still remain. As a result of these successes, the non-infectious risks such as misidentification of patients and inadequate and inappropriate transfusion have become the primary sources of transfusion risk.

DOI
Notify Library Reference ID1485

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