Residual risk of HIV, HCV and HBV in Canada.

Transfus Apher Sci

Canadian Blood Services, Canada; Dept. of Medical Microbiology, University of Toronto, Canada.

Published: June 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Residual risk of viral infections in blood donations is calculated based on incidence rates and the time frame donations could be infectious but undetectable.
  • In 2011, nucleic acid multiplex testing was introduced to improve safety by detecting HIV-1, hepatitis C, and hepatitis B more effectively.
  • The study found very low residual risks for HIV (1 in 21.4 million), HCV (1 in 12.6 million), and HBV (1 in 7.5 million), indicating the safety of blood donations remains high.

Article Abstract

Background: Residual risk is estimated as the product of the incidence and the infectious window period, the time during which a blood donation could be infectious but the assay may not detect it. In 2011 nucleic acid multiplex testing (MPX) was implemented in 6 unit minipools (previously 24 unit minipools). MPX also included hepatitis B (HBV) NAT for the first time (complementing HBsAg screening) in addition to HIV-1 and hepatitis C (HCV) as before. We aimed to estimate window period risk-day equivalents for MPX, and the residual risk of viral infections in blood donations updated to reflect current incidence and testing.

Methods: Transmissible disease conversions of repeat donations to Canadian Blood Services within the three-year period 2012-2014 divided by person-years estimated incidence for HIV, HCV and HBV (adjusted for transient viremia). Window period risk-day equivalents for MPX were estimated using a published method. Residual risk was the product of incidence and window period risk-day equivalents. 95% confidence intervals were estimated using Monte Carlo simulation of the window period risk-day equivalents and the incidence density 95% confidence intervals.

Results: The incidence rate per 100,000 person years for HIV was 0.28, HCV 1.0 and HBV 0.26. The residual risk of HIV was 1 per 21.4 million donations, HCV 1 per 12.6 million donations and HBV 1 per 7.5 million donations.

Conclusion: The residual risk of infection is very low, similar to 2006-2009. The safety benefit of further shortening of the infectious window period is below the threshold to quantify.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.transci.2017.03.010DOI Listing

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