| Literature DB >> 34578209 |
Evan M Bloch1, Peter J Krause2, Laura Tonnetti3.
Abstract
Babesia are tick-borne intra-erythrocytic parasites and the causative agents of babesiosis. Babesia, which are readily transfusion transmissible, gained recognition as a major risk to the blood supply, particularly in the United States (US), where Babesia microti is endemic. Many of those infected with Babesia remain asymptomatic and parasitemia may persist for months or even years following infection, such that seemingly healthy blood donors are unaware of their infection. By contrast, transfusion recipients are at high risk of severe babesiosis, accounting for the high morbidity and mortality (~19%) observed in transfusion-transmitted babesiosis (TTB). An increase in cases of tick-borne babesiosis and TTB prompted over a decade-long investment in blood donor surveillance, research, and assay development to quantify and contend with TTB. This culminated in the adoption of regional blood donor testing in the US. We describe the evolution of the response to TTB in the US and offer some insight into the risk of TTB in other countries. Not only has this response advanced blood safety, it has accelerated the development of novel serological and molecular assays that may be applied broadly, affording insight into the global epidemiology and immunopathogenesis of human babesiosis.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; babesiosis; blood transfusion; prevention; screening
Year: 2021 PMID: 34578209 PMCID: PMC8468711 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10091176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Transfusion-transmitted babesiosis: blood donor surveillance and follow-up studies in the United States.
| Overview | Study Design | Location (s) | Year (s) | Major Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donor surveillance | 3490 donations (1745 each fromendemic and nonendemic areas) were tested for | CT, USA (endemic and nonendemic areas) | 1999 | 30/3490 (0.9%) confirmed as seropositive ( | Leiby et al. Transfusion 2005 [ |
| Donor surveillance | 23,304 donations from 17,465 donors were tested by IFA. | CT and MA, USA | 2000–2007 | 267/23,304 (1.1%) seroprevalence. | Johnson et al. Transfusion 2009 [ |
| Donor surveillance | Cross-sectional IFA ( | CT, USA | 1999–2005 | 208/17,422 (1.2%) IFA+ | Johnson et al. Transfusion 2011 [ |
| Donor screening and follow-up (research) | CT and MA, USA | 2000 to 2004 | 18/84 (21.4%) donors parasitemic at follow-up; 9 had >1 specimen with evidence of parasitemia. | Leiby et al. Transfusion 2014 [ | |
| Hemovigilance study | Description of donor and recipient characteristics of suspected cases of TTB reported to American Red Cross. | USA (national) | 2005 to 2007 | Eighteen definite or probable B. microtiinfections with 5 fatalities | Tonnetti et al. Transfusion 2009 [ |
| Donor surveillance with prospective follow-up | Cross-sectional surveillance of consenting blood donors using RT-PCR and IFA ( | Southeast CT, USA | 2009 | 25/1002 (2.5%) IFA+ | Johnson et al. Transfusion 2013 [ |
| Donor screening (real-time/operational) | Selective real-time donor screening with IFA and PCR | RI, USA | 2010–2011 | 26/2113 (1.23%) representing 1783 blood donors were IFA+. | Young et al. Transfusion 2012 [ |
| Investigation screening using donor sample repository | Paired samples screened by AFIA and PCR. | Nonendemic | 2010 to 2011 | Positivity (Seroreactivity and/or PCR+): Nonendemic: 0.025% (95% CI, 0.00–0.14%); | Moritz et al. Transfusion 2014 [ |
| Validation study of EIA for blood donor screening | Retrospective testing of donor samples collected in high-risk endemic, lower-risk endemic, and nonendemic; EIA+ samples further tested by | Nonendemic area: AZ | 2012 | EIA repeat-reactive rates: | Levin et al. Transfusion 2014 [ |
| Donor screening (real-time/operational) | Donor screening with PCR and arrayed fluorescence immunoassay (AFIA). | CT, MA, MN, and | 2012 to 2016 | 700/220,749 donations screened positive, of which 15 (1 per 14,699 donations) were deemed to be window period infections (PCR+/AFIA-). | Moritz et al. Transfusion 2017 [ |
| Donor screening (real-time/operational) | Prospective AFIA and quantitative PCR testing of blood donors for | CT, MA, MN, and | 2012 to 2014 | 89,153 blood donation samples tested: 335 (0.38%) confirmed positive and | Moritz et al. Transfusion 2016 [ |
| Real time screening and donor notification | Screening blood donors with an investigational | NY, MN, and NM, USA, representing high endemic, moderately endemic, and nonendemic areas, respectively | 2013 | Rates of repeat reactivity by EIA: | Levin et al. Transfusion 2016 [ |
| Donor follow-up study | Prospective evaluation of seroreactive blood donors identified during study by Levin et al. [ | NY, MN, and NM, USA representing high endemic, moderately endemic and nonendemic areas respectively | 2013–2014 | 37/60 (61.67%) eligible seroreactive donors enrolled, of whom, 20 (54%) completed the 12-month follow-up: Most seroreactive donors exhibited low-level seroreactivity that was stable or waning. Level and pattern of reactivity correlated poorly with PCR positivity. | Bloch et al. Transfusion 2016 [ |
| Donor screening (real-time/operational) | Donor screening with transcription-mediated amplification (Procleix Babesia assay, Grifols Diagnostic Solutions) in | 11 endemic states, Washington DC and Florida | 2017–2018Extended to 2019 | 61/176,608 donations confirmed | Tonnetti et al. Transfusion 2020 [ |
AFIA—arrayed fluorescent immunoassay (AFIA); IFA—indirect fluorescent antibody; EIA—enzyme immunoassay; PCR—polymerase chain reaction; TTB—transfusion-transmitted babesiosis; NA—not applicable; CT—Connecticut; MA—Massachusetts; MN—Minnesota; WI—Wisconsin; VT—Vermont; AZ—Arizona; NY—New York; NM—New Mexico; OK—Oklahoma; FL—Florida; RI—Rhode Island.
Quantification of risk of transfusion transmitted babesiosis and assay development.
| Overview | Study Design | Major Finding | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy of detection methods | Development of prototype EIA | Development of protype EIA using recombinant, immunodominant peptides BMN1-17 and MN-10. | 69/72 (95.9%) IFA samples detected by EIA. | Houghton et al. Transfusion 2002 [ |
| Development of a real time PCR assay for detection of | Investigational study combining spiking experiments, probit analysis, and performance assessment using clinical sample panels. | Spiking experiment positive rate of detection: | Bloch et al. Transfusion 2013 [ | |
| Development and validation of cobas | Evaluation of analytical performance of molecular assay (cobas | Limit of detection: | Stanley et al. Transfusion 2021 [ | |
| Parasite persistence in blood products | Viability maintained through 31 days of refrigerated storage despite altered morphology, reduction in parasitemia and lag to exponential growth. | Cursino-Santos et al. Transfusion 2014 [ | ||
| Animal models for determining the risk of TTB. | Immunopathogenesis | 6 Rhesus macaque monkeys were transfused with either hamster or monkey-passaged | First detectable parasitemia 4 days in monkey-passaged cells (vs. 35 days in hamster passaged cells). | Gumber et al. Transfusion 2016 [ |
| Minimum infectious dose and kinetics of parasitemia | Murine model infected with different dilutions of | Peak parasitemia: 2 × 107 pRBCs/mL at 2 to 3 weeks and 5 × 108 pRBCs/mL at 6 weeks immunocompetent and immunodeficient, respectively. | Bakkour et al. Transfusion 2018 [ |
Abbreviations: IFA—indirect fluorescent antibody; EIA—enzyme immunoassay; PCR—polymerase chain reaction; TTB—transfusion-transmitted babesiosis; IDT—individual donor testing; MP-NAT—minipool nucleic acid testing.
Transfusion-transmitted babesiosis: blood donor surveillance and quantification of transfusion-associated risk outside of the United States.
| Study Design | Overview | Location (s) | Year (s) | Major Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case report | 53 y old female transfused for anemia secondary to gastrointestinal bleeding; found to be due to tumor of small intestine. | Ontario, Canada | 1998 | Parasites demonstrated on blood smear and diagnosis of | Kain, et al. Canadian Medical Association Journal 2001 [ |
| Case report | 40 y old male transfused for gastric bleeding; 1 month later the patient was investigated for fever and hemolysis. | Japan | 1998–1999 | Parasites demonstrated on blood smear and diagnosis of | Matsui et al. Rinsho Ketsueki 2000 [ |
| Pilot serosurvey | Retrospective IFA screening for | North and East Tyrol, Austria | Not stated | Total of 988 blood donors screened (cut-off titer 128). | Sonnleitner et al. Transfusion 2014 [ |
| Tick surveillance to guide donor serosurvey | Passive surveillance of ticks used to identify regions for tick drag sampling. All ticks were tested for | Southern Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, Canada | 2013 | 13,993/26,260 (53%) donors at the selected | O’Brien et al. Transfusion 2016 [ |
| Pilot serosurvey | Retrospective IFA screening of blood donor samples for | Heilongjiang Province, China | 2016 | 888 whole blood and 112 platelet donor samples ( | Bloch et al. Vox Sanguinis 2018 [ |
| Surveillance study | NAT (TMA) screening of 50,752 blood samples and IFA screening of a subset of TMA-nonreactive samples (14,758). | Canadian regions close to US border, including British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia | 2018 | 1/50,752 TMA-reactive; | Tonnetti et al. Transfusion 2018 [ |
| Pilot serosurvey | Retrospective IFA screening of blood donor plasma samples for | New South Wales and Queensland, Australia | 2012–2013 | 0 (0%) confirmed positive. | Faddy et al. Transfusion 2019 [ |
| Risk modelling study | Monte Carlo simulation used to estimate the number and proportion of | Canada | N/A | Expected NAT-positive donations per year (and clinically significant TTB): | O’Brien et al. Transfusion 2021 [ |
Approaches to address the risk of TTB.
| Approach | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Risk-based deferral | Low cost | • Lack of specificity |
| Peripheral blood smear | • Direct observation of parasites | • Not amenable to high-throughput donor screening |
| Serology | • Relatively low cost | • Poor correlation with active parasitemia risks intolerable rates of deferral in highly endemic areas |
| Molecular methods | • Detectable RNA or DNA is a reasonable correlate of active parasitemia | • Higher cost than serology |
| Pathogen reduction | • FDA- and EU-approved photochemical inactivation technology is available for use in platelets and plasma; allowable as an alternative to molecular testing | • Absence of a licensed pathogen reduction technology for red blood cells and whole blood; TTB has not been ascribed to apheresis-collected platelets and plasma |