AI Article Synopsis

  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of liver disease, especially in Africa, and this study focused on understanding its prevalence and genetic types in Rwandan blood donors.
  • In 2014, data from over 45,000 blood donations were analyzed, revealing a low confirmed anti-HCV prevalence of 1.6%, mainly among first-time donors in the eastern region, with confirmed cases more common in females.
  • The study's findings suggest that previous estimates of HCV prevalence may have been inflated due to a high number of non-confirmable anti-HCV results, highlighting the need for further investigation into testing mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Background: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the leading cause of severe liver disease worldwide and is highly endemic in Africa, where it often has nosocomial spread. Little is known on the HCV prevalence, risk for transfusion-transmitted HCV, and circulating genotypes in Rwanda. This study was performed to investigate the prevalence of anti-HCV among blood donors from all regions of the country and genetically characterize identified HCV strains.

Study Design And Methods: Data on anti-HCV reactivity for all 45,061 Rwandan blood donations during 2014 were compiled. Samples from 720 blood donors were reanalyzed for anti-HCV in Sweden. Line immunoassay INNO-LIA HCV and detection of HCV RNA by polymerase chain reaction were used to confirm anti-HCV reactivity. The NS5B and core regions were sequenced and phylogenetic analysis was performed.

Results: The anti-HCV prevalence among all first-time blood donors was 1.6%, with the highest occurrence in donors from the eastern region. On further analysis, only 25 of 120 primarily anti-HCV-reactive samples could be confirmed reactive and 15 samples had indeterminate results by INNO-LIA. Confirmed reactivity was more common among females than males (p = 0.03) with no regional difference. Phylogenetic analysis of the sequences showed a predominance of subtypes 4k, 4q, and 4r, with no geographical difference in their distribution.

Conclusion: The prevalence of anti-HCV among Rwandan blood donors has probably been overestimated previously due to the high rate of nonconfirmable anti-HCV reactivity. Further study of the involved mechanism is needed to avoid loss of blood products and distress for blood donors and other test recipients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/trf.14204DOI Listing

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