Marked reduction in the incidence of transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus infection after the introduction of antibody to hepatitis B core antigen and individual donation nucleic acid amplification screening in Japan

被引:8
|
作者
Tanaka, Ami [1 ,3 ]
Yamagishi, Naoji [1 ]
Hasegawa, Takashi [1 ]
Miyakawa, Keiko [2 ]
Goto, Naoko [2 ]
Matsubayashi, Keiji [1 ]
Satake, Masahiro [1 ]
机构
[1] Cent Blood Inst, Blood Serv Headquarters, Japanese Red Cross Soc, Tokyo, Japan
[2] Japanese Red Cross Soc, Blood Serv Headquarters, Tokyo, Japan
[3] Japanese Red Cross Soc, Cent Blood Inst, Blood Serv Headquarters, 2-1-67 Tatsumi, Koto-Ku, Tokyo 1358521, Japan
关键词
antibody to hepatitis B core antigen; hepatitis B virus; individual donation nucleic acid amplification testing; lookback study; occult HBV infection; sexually transmitted disease; transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus infection; window period; HBV INFECTION; BLOOD COMPONENTS; SURFACE-ANTIGEN; WINDOW PERIOD; GENOTYPES; DONORS; DNA; TRANSMISSION; NAT;
D O I
10.1111/trf.17546
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: In Japan, 41 million blood donations have been screened for hepatitis B virus (HBV) during the past 8.4 years using individual donation nucleic acid amplification testing (ID-NAT) and antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc) screening. Study Design and Methods: Transfusion-transmitted HBV infection (TT-HBV) incidence was examined. Donated blood implicated in TT-HBV was analyzed for infection stage and DNA levels. Causative HBV strains were phylogenetically analyzed. Results: Among 5162 (0.013%) ID-NAT positives, window period (WP) and occult HBV infection (OBI) accounted for 3.4% (176) and 11.5% (594), respectively. No OBI-related TT-HBV occurred. Seven blood donations caused eight TT-HBV cases, six of which were in the pre-ID-NAT WP, leaving one with an unresolved infection stage. Seven cases were caused by platelet concentrate (180 mL plasma) and one case by fresh-frozen plasma (200 mL plasma), which contained estimated infectious doses varying between 2 and 2300 HBV virions. HBV subgenotypes in five cases were HBV/A2. Complete genome sequences of the transmitting A2 strains were nearly identical (99.6%-100%) and clustered in a group that included HBV/HIV-1 coinfections and a higher proportion of donors in the acute infection phase (69%) than the other group of HBV/A2 sequences (5%). Discussion: The incidence of observed TT-HBV cases has significantly reduced to 0.19 per million in the ID-NAT screening period. OBI-related TT-HBV was eliminated by anti-HBc screening. Established TT-HBV cases were caused by blood products with large plasma volumes containing extremely low HBV concentrations derived from blood donors at a very early infection stage.
引用
收藏
页码:2083 / 2097
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus infection
    Candotti, Daniel
    Allain, Jean-Pierre
    JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, 2009, 51 (04) : 798 - 809
  • [2] Fatal outcome of a hepatitis B virus transfusion-transmitted infection
    Niederhauser, C.
    Weingand, T.
    Candotti, D.
    Maier, A.
    Tinguely, C.
    Wuillemin, W. A.
    Gowland, P.
    Allain, J. P.
    Stolz, M.
    VOX SANGUINIS, 2010, 98 (04) : 504 - 507
  • [3] Reducing the risk of hepatitis B virus transfusion-transmitted infection
    Niederhauser, Christoph
    JOURNAL OF BLOOD MEDICINE, 2011, 2 : 91 - 102
  • [4] Efficacy of individual nucleic acid amplification testing in reducing the risk of transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus infection in Switzerland, a low-endemic region
    Stolz, Martin
    Tinguely, Caroline
    Graziani, Mauro
    Fontana, Stefano
    Gowland, Peter
    Buser, Andreas
    Michel, Martine
    Canellini, Giorgia
    Zueger, Max
    Schumacher, Philippe
    Lelie, Nico
    Niederhauser, Christoph
    TRANSFUSION, 2010, 50 (12) : 2695 - 2706
  • [5] Transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection from an individual-donation nucleic acid (ID-NAT) non-reactive donor
    O'Flaherty, N.
    Ushiro-Lumb, I.
    Pomeroy, L.
    Ijaz, S.
    Boland, F.
    De Gascun, C.
    Fitzgerald, J.
    O'Riordan, J.
    VOX SANGUINIS, 2018, 113 (03) : 300 - 303
  • [6] DONOR SCREENING FOR ANTIBODY TO HEPATITIS-B CORE ANTIGEN AND HEPATITIS-B VIRUS-INFECTION IN TRANSFUSION RECIPIENTS
    MOSLEY, JW
    STEVENS, CE
    AACH, RD
    HOLLINGER, FB
    MIMMS, LT
    SOLOMON, LR
    BARBOSA, LH
    NEMO, GJ
    TRANSFUSION, 1995, 35 (01) : 5 - 12
  • [7] The first case of transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus genotype I in Japan
    Yamagishi, Naoji
    Ando, Naoko
    Yoshimasa, Takashi
    Toda, Shizuho
    Sobata, Rieko
    Goto, Naoko
    Matsubayashi, Keiji
    Satake, Masahiro
    Tani, Yoshihiko
    TRANSFUSION, 2025,
  • [8] Is infective blood donation missed without screening for antibody to hepatitis B core antigen and/or hepatitis B virus DNA?
    Mühlbacher, A
    Zdunek, D
    Melchior, W
    Michl, U
    VOX SANGUINIS, 2001, 81 (02) : 139 - 139
  • [9] Transfusion-transmitted hepatitis B virus infection in the UK: a small and moving target
    Soldan, K
    Barbara, JAJ
    Dow, BC
    VOX SANGUINIS, 2002, 83 (04) : 305 - 308
  • [10] Universal nucleic acid donor screening revealed epidemiological features of hepatitis E and prevented transfusion-transmitted infection in Japan
    Tanaka, Ami
    Matsubayashi, Keiji
    Odajima, Takeshi
    Sakata, Hidekatsu
    Iida, Juri
    Kai, Kazuhiro
    Goto, Naoko
    Satake, Masahiro
    TRANSFUSION, 2024, 64 (02) : 335 - 347