AI Article Synopsis

  • The Canadian blood supply has been screened for West Nile virus (WNV) since 2003, with a targeted testing strategy (ID-NAT) implemented in 2004 to better identify infectious donations missed by minipool (MP) testing.
  • In 2007, during a significant WNV epidemic, researchers analyzed 78 WNV-positive donations, finding a concentration of cases in late summer and certain western provinces, with ID-NAT identifying 52 of these.
  • The study concluded that while MP testing captures most infectious donations, targeted ID-NAT could provide additional benefits, as many donors exhibited mild symptoms yet still participated in donation.

Article Abstract

Background: The Canadian blood supply has been screened for West Nile virus (WNV) since 2003. A strategy for targeted individual-donation nucleic acid testing (ID-NAT) was implemented in 2004 to identify potentially infectious donations that may be missed by minipool (MP) testing. In 2007, Canada experienced a larger epidemic than in previous years providing an opportunity to evaluate the ID-NAT triggering algorithm in higher-risk areas.

Study Design And Methods: A specially created database and internal-external communication identified regions for targeted ID-NAT using MP and community triggers. WNV-positive donations identified by ID-NAT were reexamined in MP to assess the efficacy of targeted ID-NAT in identifying potentially infectious donations that may have been missed by MP testing. WNV-positive donation data from 2006 and 2007 were analyzed to examine temporal and geographic trends. A telephone survey about symptoms was carried out after the 2007 season.

Results: In total 78 WNV-positive donations were identified (66 true-positives and four false-positives being in 2007). Most positive donations were in the late summer, concentrated in the same western provinces as community cases. Fifty-two donations were identified by ID-NAT and 46% were consistently positive in MP. Of the other 54%, 74% were immunoglobulin (Ig)M- and/or IgG-positive. Fifty-six percent of donors experienced mostly mild symptoms before or after donation (but all said they were well at the time of donation).

Conclusion: WNV-positive donations correspond geographically with the epidemic. MP testing identifies most potentially infectious donations with a smaller potential benefit from targeted ID-NAT. Mild symptoms are common but may not deter donation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2009.02550.xDOI Listing

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