| Literature DB >> 24995863 |
Andrew E Levin1, Phillip C Williamson, James L Erwin, Sherri Cyrus, Evan M Bloch, Beth H Shaz, Debra Kessler, Sam R Telford, Peter J Krause, Gary P Wormser, Xiaoyan Ni, Haihong Wang, Neil X Krueger, Sally Caglioti, Michael P Busch.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transfusion-transmitted babesiosis caused by Babesia microti has emerged as a significant risk to the US blood supply. This study estimated the prevalence of B. microti antibodies in blood donors using an investigational enzyme immunoassay (EIA). STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: A peptide-based EIA that detects both immunoglobulin (Ig)G and IgM antibodies to B. microti was developed and validated. Donor samples randomly selected from areas defined as high-risk endemic, lower-risk endemic, and nonendemic for B. microti were deidentified and tested using the investigational EIA. Samples that were EIA repeat reactive were further tested by B. microti immunofluorescent assay (IFA), polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on red blood cell lysates, and peripheral blood smear examination. A random subset of 1272 samples from high-risk endemic areas was tested by IFA, PCR, and peripheral blood smear in parallel with EIA.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24995863 PMCID: PMC4163072 DOI: 10.1111/trf.12763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfusion ISSN: 0041-1132 Impact factor: 3.157
Figure 1Flow charts showing the two arms of the study. Numbers in parentheses represent numbers of samples at each stage. RR = repeat reactive.
Figure 2Distribution of S/CO values in the B. microti EIA for healthy blood donors from a non-endemic area (⋄, n = 1003), clinical babesiosis patients that were positive by IFA at 1:64 (□, n = 72), and blood donors from a high-risk endemic area that were EIA repeat reactive or repeat gray zone (n = 69), subdivided between IFA-positive (△, n = 19) and IFA-negative (○, n = 50) groups. The original EIA cutoff is shown as a horizontal dashed line.
B. microti seroprevalence results for donor sera from endemic and nonendemic regions*
| Sample category | IFA positive | PCR positive | Blood smear positive | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Original C/O | Revised C/O | |||||
| High-risk endemic donors (Suffolk County, NY) (n = 5000) | 1.14 (57) | 1.08 (54) | 0.92 (46) | 0.36 (18) | 0.02 (1) | 0 |
| Lower-risk endemic donors (Brooklyn and Manhattan, NY) (n = 5000) | 0.86 (43) | 0.74 (37) | 0.54 (27) | 0.06 (3) | 0 | 0 |
| Nonendemic donors (Arizona) (n = 5000) | 0.48 (24) | 0.40 (20) | 0.16 (8) | 0.02 (1) | 0 | 0 |
| Clinical babesiosis cases (n = 74) | 95.9 (71) | 93.2 (69) | 100 (74) | 44.6 (33) | 60.8 (45) | |
Data are reported as percent (number) of samples in each category.
See Materials and Methods and Appendix S1 for description of original cutoff and revised cutoff.
Reactivity of samples initially scored in the gray zone in the B . microti EIA
| Region | EIA initially gray zone | EIA reactive or gray zone upon retest | IFA reactive | PCR positive | Blood smear positive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High-risk endemic (n = 5000) | 19 | 14 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Lower-risk endemic (n = 5000) | 14 | 13 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Nonendemic (n = 5000) | 17 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Numbers of samples in each category are shown.
The single IFA reactive sample in this table exhibited an estimated IFA titer of 1:64 for IgG, and was scored in the EIA gray zone initially and upon retest. An additional sample not included in Tables1 and 2 was initially EIA reactive but in the gray zone on retesting.