Hepatitis B virus transmission by blood transfusion during 4 years of individual-donation nucleic acid testing in South Africa: estimated and observed window period risk.

TitleHepatitis B virus transmission by blood transfusion during 4 years of individual-donation nucleic acid testing in South Africa: estimated and observed window period risk.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsVermeulen M, Dickens C, Lelie N, Walker E, Coleman C, Keyter M, Reddy R, Crookes R, Kramvis A
JournalTransfusion// Transfusion
Volume52
Issue4
Pagination880 - 92
Date Published2012//
ISBN Number1537-2995
Other Numberswdn, 0417360
Keywords*Blood Transfusion/ae [Adverse Effects], *DNA, Viral/bl [Blood], *Hepatitis B/tm [Transmission], Acute Disease, Hepatitis B/di [Diagnosis], Humans, Phylogeny, risk, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Viral Load
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Since October 2005, a total of 2,921,561 blood donations have been screened by the South African National Blood Service for hepatitis B virus (HBV) by individual-donation nucleic acid testing (ID-NAT). Over 4 years, 149 hepatitis B surface antigen-negative acute-phase HBV NAT-positive donations were identified (1:19,608). The lookback program identified one probable HBV transmission., STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: The complete genomes of HBV isolated from the donor and recipient were sequenced, cloned, and analyzed phylogenetically. The HBV window period (WP) transmission risk was estimated assuming a minimum infectious dose of 3.7 HBV virions and an incidence rate correction factor of 1.34 for transient detectability of HBV DNA., RESULTS: Of 149 acute-phase HBV NAT yields, 114 (1:25,627) were classified as pre-antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc) WP and 35 (1:83,473) as post-anti-HBc WP. The acute-phase transmission risk in the HBV DNA-negative pre- and post-anti-HBc WPs (of 15.3 and 1.3 days, respectively) was estimated at 1:40,000 and 1:480,000, respectively. One HBV transmission (1:2,900,000) was identified in a patient who received a transfusion from an ID-NAT-nonreactive donor in the pre-anti-HBc WP. Sequence analysis confirmed transmission of HBV Subgenotype A1 with 99.7% nucleotide homology between donor and recipient strains. The viral burden in the infectious red blood cell unit was estimated at 32 (22-43) HBV DNA copies/20 mL of plasma., CONCLUSION: We report the first known case of transfusion-transmitted HBV infection by blood screened using ID-NAT giving an observed HBV transmission rate of 0.34 per million. The estimated pre-acute-phase transmission risk in the ID-NAT screened donor population was 73-fold higher than the observed WP transmission rate.Copyright © 2011 American Association of Blood Banks.

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