Literature DB >> 9763887

The role of commercial plasmapheresis banks on the AIDS epidemic in Mexico.

P Volkow1, R Perez-Padilla, C del-Rio, A Mohar.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize the circumstances underlying the epidemic of AIDS associated with blood transfusion in Mexico and to explore the possible mechanisms for its dissemination.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis comparing the total number of AIDS cases and transfusion-associated AIDS cases and the male:female ratio reported in Mexico and the U.S. from 1981 to 1996 was done. We analyzed the relationship between the location of plasmapheresis banks and the geographic distribution of transfusion-associated AIDS cases and AIDS cases among paid donors in order to assess the possible role of plasmapheresis banks in its dissemination.
RESULTS: The proportion of transfusion-associated AIDS in the total number of cases was significantly higher in Mexico than in the U.S. from 1987 through 1996 (p < .0001). A rapid drop in the male:female ratio of AIDS was observed in Mexico but not in the U.S. coinciding with a growing number of transfusion associated cases; transfusion has been the main risk factor for AIDS in women in our country. In 1986, seven States and Mexico City had plasmapheresis banks: they reported 90% of the cases associated to paid donation and 75% of those associated to transfusion, despite the fact that commercial blood banks without plasmapheresis facilities existed in 23 of the other 24 States.
CONCLUSION: There was a difference on the frequency of transfusion associated AIDS between Mexico and the U.S. which reached epidemic proportions in Mexico. We believe that plasmapheresis banks played a major role in the dissemination of the infection in Mexico as paid donors provided a third of the blood used in Mexico in 1986. These findings highlight important implications for the prevention of AIDS in developing countries where commercial plasmapheresis practices are still in operation.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9763887

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Invest Clin        ISSN: 0034-8376            Impact factor:   1.451


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