International review of blood donation screening for anti-HBc and occult hepatitis B virus infection.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
November 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Fu, Michael X | |
Faddy, Helen M | |
Candotti, Daniel | |
Groves, Jamel | |
Saa, Paula | |
Styles, Claire | |
Adesina, Opeyemi | |
Carrillo, Jose Perez | |
Seltsam, Axel | |
Weber-Schehl, Marijke | |
O'Brien, Sheila F | |
Drews, Steven J | |
Aidoo, Nana Benyin | |
Pajares, Ángel Luis | |
Perez, Laura Navarro | |
Deng, Xuelian | |
van de Laar, Thijs | |
Laperche, Syria | |
Lehtisalo, Riikka | |
Yilmaz, Soner | |
Tsoi, Wai-Chiu | |
Juhl, David | |
Chenarsabz, Nahid | |
O'Flaherty, Niamh | |
Goto, Naoko | |
Satake, Masahiro | |
Renaud, Christian | |
Lewin, Antoine | |
Cloutier, Marc | |
Sawadogo, Salam | |
Reynolds, Claire | |
Zhiburt, Eugene | |
Muylaert, An | |
Van Gaever, Véronique | |
Garcia-Otalora, Michel-Andres | |
Jarvis, Lisa | |
Vermeulen, Marion | |
Busch, Michael | |
Blackmore, Stuart | |
Jones, Ann | |
Brailsford, Su | |
Irving, William L | |
Andersson, Monique | |
Simmonds, Peter | |
Harvala, Heli |
Subject(s)
Series
Transfusion
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1537-2995
0041-1132
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39359112
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Background
Hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) screening has been implemented in many blood establishments to help prevent transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV), including from donors with occult HBV infection (OBI). We review HBV screening algorithms across blood establishments globally and their potential effectiveness in reducing transmission risk.
Materials And Methods
A questionnaire on HBV screening and follow-up strategies was distributed to members of the International Society of Blood Transfusion working party on transfusion-transmitted infectious diseases. Screening data from 2022 were assimilated and analyzed.
Results
A total of 30 unique responses were received from 25 countries. Sixteen respondents screened all donations for anti-HBc, with 14 also screening all donations for HBV DNA. Anti-HBc prevalence was 0.42% in all blood donors and 1.19% in new donors in low-endemic countries; however, only 44% of respondents performed additional anti-HBc testing to exclude false reactivity. 0.68% of anti-HBc positive, HBsAg-negative donors had detectable HBV DNA. Ten respondents did universal HBV DNA screening without anti-HBc, whereas four respondents did not screen for either. Deferral strategies for anti-HBc positive donors were highly variable. One transfusion-transmission from an anti-HBc negative donor was reported.
Discussion
Anti-HBc screening identifies donors with OBI but also results in the unnecessary deferral of a significant number of donors with resolved HBV infection and donors with false-reactive anti-HBc results. Whilst confirmation of anti-HBc results could be improved to reduce donor deferral, transmission risks associated with anti-HBc negative OBI donors must be considered. In high-endemic areas, highly sensitive HBV DNA testing is required to identify infectious donors.
Hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) screening has been implemented in many blood establishments to help prevent transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV), including from donors with occult HBV infection (OBI). We review HBV screening algorithms across blood establishments globally and their potential effectiveness in reducing transmission risk.
Materials And Methods
A questionnaire on HBV screening and follow-up strategies was distributed to members of the International Society of Blood Transfusion working party on transfusion-transmitted infectious diseases. Screening data from 2022 were assimilated and analyzed.
Results
A total of 30 unique responses were received from 25 countries. Sixteen respondents screened all donations for anti-HBc, with 14 also screening all donations for HBV DNA. Anti-HBc prevalence was 0.42% in all blood donors and 1.19% in new donors in low-endemic countries; however, only 44% of respondents performed additional anti-HBc testing to exclude false reactivity. 0.68% of anti-HBc positive, HBsAg-negative donors had detectable HBV DNA. Ten respondents did universal HBV DNA screening without anti-HBc, whereas four respondents did not screen for either. Deferral strategies for anti-HBc positive donors were highly variable. One transfusion-transmission from an anti-HBc negative donor was reported.
Discussion
Anti-HBc screening identifies donors with OBI but also results in the unnecessary deferral of a significant number of donors with resolved HBV infection and donors with false-reactive anti-HBc results. Whilst confirmation of anti-HBc results could be improved to reduce donor deferral, transmission risks associated with anti-HBc negative OBI donors must be considered. In high-endemic areas, highly sensitive HBV DNA testing is required to identify infectious donors.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Transfusion - 2024 - Fu - International review of blood donation screening for anti‐HBc and occult hepatitis B virus.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 2.15 MB | published |