4.2 Article

Hepatitis E virus in Scottish blood donors

Journal

VOX SANGUINIS
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 283-289

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/vox.12056

Keywords

blood donors; HEV; NAT testing; serological testing

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Funding

  1. Chief Scientist Office Scotland [ETM/32]
  2. Chief Scientist Office [ETM/32] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background and Objectives Published prevalence figures for hepatitis E virus (HEV) reveal significant regional differences. Several studies have reported virus transmission via blood transfusion. The aim of this study was to establish HEV seroprevalence and investigate a potential HEV RNA presence in Scottish blood donors. Materials and Methods IgG and IgM were determined in individual serum samples. HEV RNA was investigated in plasma mini-pools corresponding to 43 560 individual donations using nested PCR. Samples amenable to reamplification with primers from a different region were considered confirmed positives, sequenced and analysed. Results A total of 73 of 1559 tested individual sera (4 center dot 7%) were IgG positive, none tested positive for IgM. Plasma mini-pool testing revealed an HEV RNA frequency of 1 in 14 520 donations. Three confirmed positives belonged, as expected to genotype 3. Conclusions HEV IgG and RNA figures in Scottish blood donors are lower than those published for the rest of the UK, but sufficiently high to prompt further studies on potential transmission rates and effects of HEV infection, especially for immunosuppressed individuals.

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