Infectivity of blood products from donors with occult hepatitis B virus infection

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

  • Jean-Pierre Allain
  • Ivanka Mihaljevic
  • Maria Isabel Gonzalez-Fraile
  • Knut Gubbe
  • Harritshøj, Lene Holm
  • Jose Maria Garrido Garcia
  • Ewa Brojer
  • Christian Erikstrup
  • Mona Saniewski
  • Lorenz Wernish
  • Lydia Bianco
  • Henrik Ullum
  • Daniel Candotti
  • Nico Lelie
  • Wolfram H Gerlich
  • Michael Chudy

BACKGROUND: Occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection (OBI) is identified in 1:1000 to 1:50,000 European blood donations. This study intended to determine the infectivity of blood products from OBI donors.

STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Recipients of previous donations from OBI donors were investigated through lookback (systematic retrieval of recipients) or traceback (triggered by clinical cases). Serologic and genomic studies were undertaken on consenting donors and recipients. Multiple variables potentially affecting infectivity were examined.

RESULTS: A total of 45 of 105 (42.9%) donor-recipients pairs carried antibodies to HBV core (anti-HBc) as evidence of previous HBV infection. Subtracting 15% of anti-HBc population background, the adjusted transmission rate was 28%. Anti-HBc prevalence increased to 28 of 44 (63.8%) in unvaccinated recipients receiving anti-HBs-negative OBI blood products. In contrast, four of 26 (15.4%) recipients of anti-HBs-positive products were anti-HBc positive. Transmission with anti-HBs-negative products depended on volume of plasma transfused (85%-100% with 200 mL of fresh frozen plasma [FFP], 51% with 50 mL in platelet concentrates [PCs], and 24% with 20 mL in red blood cells [RBCs], p < 0.0001 FFP vs. RBCs). The 50% minimum infectious dose of OBI HBV DNA was estimated at 1049 (117-3441) copies. Donor and recipient strains sequence homology of at least 99% confirmed transfusion-transmitted infection in 10 cases and excluded it in one case.

CONCLUSION: Blood products from donors with OBI carry a high risk of HBV transmission by transfusion. This risk is dependent on presence of anti-HBs and viral dose. This may justify safety measures such as anti-HBc and HBV nucleic acid test screening depending on epidemiology.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTransfusion
Volume53
Issue number7
Pages (from-to)1405-15
Number of pages11
ISSN0041-1132
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2013

    Research areas

  • Adult, Aged, Blood Donors, Blood Transfusion, Female, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis B Antibodies, Hepatitis B virus, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Risk Factors, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

ID: 180570776