1. Detection of hepatitis B virus infection in German blood donors 2008–2015
- Author
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Heinrich Scheiblauer, Doris Oberle, Michael Chudy, Julia Kreß, Christine Jork, Margarethe Heiden, and Markus B. Funk
- Subjects
Hepatitis B virus ,endocrine system ,HBsAg ,Blood Donors ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Blood donations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Germany ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Medicine ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Seroconversion ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,fungi ,virus diseases ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Viral Load ,Hepatitis B ,Hepatitis B Core Antigens ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,body regions ,Residual risk ,DNA, Viral ,business ,Viral load ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Background and objectives Assessment of HBV-NAT testing compared to HBsAg and anti-HBc screening in German blood establishments for the period 2008-2015. Materials and methods Blood donations screened for HBsAg and anti-HBc along with HBV-NAT were evaluated. Sensitivity of HBsAg and HBV-NAT tests was compared in 30 HBV seroconversion panels and with the viral load of the NAT-only cases. Residual risk for HBV in the WP was modelled. Results A total of 45 270 111 donations were evaluated. There were 29 NAT-only cases in the HBsAg-negative HBV-WP, one by ID-NAT and 28 by MP-NAT. MP-NAT, on average, showed higher sensitivity than HBsAg testing: MP-NAT-LoD of 146 IU/ml vs. 362 IU/ml HBV DNA for positive HBsAg detection (range 135-1502 IU/ml), resulting in 3·1 days (range 2·0-4·8 days) earlier HBV detection. Viral loads of the NAT-only cases confirmed the sensitivity of the HBV tests in the seroconversion study. One HBsAg-negative case was due to a new HBsAg mutant combination. There was one HBsAg-reactive only case. In addition, HBV incidence in the HBV-WP included 41 HBsAg-/HBV-NAT-positives and three HBV transmission cases. The residual risk for HBsAg was estimated to be 1:1 619 419-1 268 474 compared to 1:2 793 365-2 134 702 for MP-NAT. Within chronic HBV (HBsAg-/anti-HBc-positive and MP-NAT-negative) 70% were ID-NAT positive at low viral load (median 20 IU/ml). Among anti-HBc-only, supplementary ID-NAT detected 23 occult HBV infections. Conclusions In the HBV-WP, MP-NAT provided a higher sensitivity than HBsAg testing, obtained a considerably higher yield and reduced the risk for HBV transmission. In later HBV stages, anti-HBc screening and HBV-ID-NAT intercepted potentially infectious donations.
- Published
- 2020
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