| Literature DB >> 29043965 |
Vincent C C Cheng, Siddharth Sridhar, Shuk-Ching Wong, Sally C Y Wong, Jasper F W Chan, Cyril C Y Yip, Chi-Hung Chau, Timmy W K Au, Yu-Yan Hwang, Carol S W Yau, Janice Y C Lo, Cheuk-Kwong Lee, Kwok-Yung Yuen.
Abstract
Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is a mosquitoborne virus endemic to China and Southeast Asia that causes severe encephalitis in <1% of infected persons. Transmission of JEV via blood transfusion has not been reported. We report transmission of JEV via blood donation products from an asymptomatic viremic donor to 2 immunocompromised recipients. One recipient on high-dose immunosuppressive drugs received JEV-positive packed red blood cells after a double lung transplant; severe encephalitis and a poor clinical outcome resulted. JEV RNA was detected in serum, cerebrospinal fluid, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid specimens. The second recipient had leukemia and received platelets after undergoing chemotherapy. This patient was asymptomatic; JEV infection was confirmed in this person by IgM seroconversion. This study illustrates that, consistent with other pathogenic flaviviruses, JEV can be transmitted via blood products. Targeted donor screening and pathogen reduction technologies could be used to prevent transfusion-transmitted JEV infection in highly JEV-endemic areas.Entities:
Keywords: China; Japanese encephalitis virus; asymptomatic; blood transfusion; encephalitis; immunocompromised host; infection control; packed red blood cells; platelets; vector-borne infections; viral encephalitis; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29043965 PMCID: PMC5749455 DOI: 10.3201/eid2401.171297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Timeline of index patient with transfusion-transmitted JEV infection, Hong Kong, China, May‒July 2017. Day counts indicate the number of days after double lung transplant, unless specified otherwise. COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; RT-PCR, reverse transcription PCR.
Figure 2Magnetic resonance imaging of brain of index patient 66 days after double lung transplantation, Hong Kong, China. Coronal FLAIR (FLuid Attenuation Inversion Recovery sequence) image of the head at the level of the lateral ventricles, thalamus, and midbrain shows high signal at bilateral thalamus, midbrain, and medial temporal lobes.
Demographics, investigation results, and clinical details of asymptomatic JEV-infected blood donor and recipients, Hong Kong, China, May‒July 2017*
| Variable | Donor | Packed red blood cell recipient (index patient) | Platelet recipient | Plasma recipient |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Underlying disease | No history of disease, no recent travel to JEV-endemic regions outside Hong Kong; resides in JEV-endemic area Tin Shui Wai, Yuen Long | End-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with lung transplantation, May 10 | Acute myeloid leukemia post induction chemotherapy with cytarabine and daunorubicin | Intracranial hemorrhage |
| Blood donation or transfusion type, date | Blood donation, May 29 | Packed red blood cell transfusion, June 22 | Platelet transfusion, June 2 | Plasma transfusion, June 20 |
| Pretransfusion IgM serology result, date | Specimen not available | Serum negative, May 31 | Serum negative, May 25 | Specimen not available |
| Posttransfusion IgM serology result, date | Serum positive, July 22 | CSF positive, July 11; serum positive, July 15 and 18 | Serum positive, July 5 and 22 | Specimen not available |
| JEV nucleic acid test, specimen type and result, date | Positive archived blood specimen | Positive blood sample, June 26 and 28; positive bronchoalveolar lavage, July 10 | Negative plasma sample, July 22; negative urine sample, July 25 | Specimen not available |
| Clinical symptoms | Asymptomatic | Fever and rash July 6 (14 d after transfusion), followed by decreased consciousness and myoclonic jerks; MRI showed typical appearance of T2 hyperintensity of bilateral thalami, substantia nigra, and medial temporal lobes | Asymptomatic | Unknown |
| Outcome | Full recovery | Died October 1, 2017 | Full recovery | Died from respiratory failure 14 d after transfusion |
*CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree constructed by using partial nonstructural protein 5 (NS5) sequences of JEV isolates detected in index patient and donor blood samples, Hong Kong, China, and other JEV reference strains available in GenBank (accession numbers shown). The tree was inferred from data by using the maximum-likelihood method with bootstrap values calculated from 1,000 trees. Only bootstrap values >70% are shown. A 167-nt fragment of NS5 from each virus was used in this analysis. Labels at right indicate JEV genotypes (GI–V): JEV from patient and donor samples grouped with GI strains. Scale bar indicates estimated number of nucleotide substitutions per 20 nt. BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus.