Literature DB >> 25766141

Viremia levels in hepatitis C infection among Egyptian blood donors and implications for transmission risk with different screening scenarios.

Magdy El Ekiaby1, Faten Moftah2, Heidi Goubran2, Harry van Drimmelen3, Syria LaPerche4, Steve Kleinman5, Michael Busch6, Nico Lelie7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Knowledge about the viral load (VL) distributions in different stages of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is essential to compare the efficacy of serologic screening and nucleic acid testing (NAT) in preventing transfusion transmission risk. We studied HCV-RNA levels in Egyptian blood donors in the preseroconversion window period (WP) and in later anti-HCV-positive stages of infection. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Subsets of individual-donation (ID)-NAT and anti-HCV-yield samples from a screening study among 119,756 donors were tested for VL by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Low viremia levels below the quantification limit of qPCR were determined by probit analysis using the proportion of reactive results on replicate NATs. Poisson distribution statistics were used to estimate transmission risk in different stages of HCV infection based on 50% minimum infectious doses (MID50 ) of 3.2 (1-10) and 316 (100-1000) virions in the absence and presence of anti-HCV, respectively.
RESULTS: Rates of total HCV infections and WP-NAT-yield donations in two Egyptian blood centers varied between 2.6% to 4.5% and 1:3100 to 1:9500, respectively. VLs ranged from 82 to 3 × 10(7) copies/mL in WP and from fewer than 1600 to 1.6 × 10(6) copies/mL in anti-HCV-positive carrier donations. Only two (1.1%) of 175 donors with probable resolved infection had detectable RNA on replicate testing (estimated VLs of 0.5 and 1.8 copies/mL). This translates to an estimated transmission risk of 0.028% if ID-NAT-nonreactive, anti-HCV-positive donations would be used for RBC transfusions.
CONCLUSION: Almost 99% of anti-HCV-reactive donations without detectable HCV-RNA on initial ID-NAT screening had eradicated the virus from the circulation, while 1% had extremely low VLs and are likely not infectious. The incremental safety offered by serologic testing of ID-NAT-screened blood seems minimal.
© 2015 AABB.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25766141     DOI: 10.1111/trf.13061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transfusion        ISSN: 0041-1132            Impact factor:   3.157


  2 in total

1.  A cross sectional study of the risk factors of hepatitis C infection in North Egypt.

Authors:  Soad S Mandoh; Kholoud Ayman; Ahmed Elbardakheny; Hala Raaft; Ahmed A Ibrahim; Rasha Alsaeed Alshaikh; Fotouh R Mansour
Journal:  Virusdisease       Date:  2021-03-20

2.  Effectiveness of the HCV blood screening strategy through eighteen years of surveillance of HCV infection in blood donors in France.

Authors:  Pierre Cappy; Laure Boizeau; Daniel Candotti; Rémi Caparros; Quentin Lucas; Eliane Garrabe; Christophe Martinaud; Sophie Le Cam; Pierre Gallian; Pascal Morel; Josiane Pillonel; Syria Laperche
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2021-05-12       Impact factor: 3.443

  2 in total

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