4.7 Article

HIV incidence in US first-time blood donors and transfusion risk with a 12-month deferral for men who have sex with men

期刊

BLOOD
卷 136, 期 11, 页码 1359-1367

出版社

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020007003

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资金

  1. FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research [HHSF223201510165C, HHSF223201510149C]
  2. National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute [Y01 AHL15003001-1-0-1]
  3. Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health

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In 2015, the US Food and Drug Administration published revised guidance that recommended a change in blood donor deferral of men who have sex with men (MSM) from an indefinite to a 12-month deferral since the donor last had sex with a man. We assessed whether HIV incidence in first-time blood donors or associated transfusion risk increased. Donations in 4 major blood collection organizations were monitored for 15 months before and 2 years after implementation of the 12-month MSM deferral policy. HIV-positive donations were classified as recently acquired or bng-term using a recent infection testing algorithm and incidence in both periods estimated. Residual transfusion transmission risk was estimated by multiplying incidence by the length of the infectious window period. The latter was estimated using a model based on infectious dose and the sensitivity of nucleic acid testing. Factors associated with incident infection in each period were assessed using Poisson regression. Overall HIV incidence in first-time donors before implementation of the 12-month MSM deferral was estimated at 2.62 cases per 100000 person-years (10(5) PY) (95% credible interval [CI], 1.53-3.93 cases/10(5) PY), and after implementation at 2.85 cases/10(5) PY (95% CI, 1.96-3.93 cases/10(5) PY), with no statistically significant change. In male first-time donors, the incidence difference was 0.93 cases/10(5) PY (95% CI, -1.74-3.58 cases/10(5) PY). The residual risk of HIV transfusion transmission through components sourced from first-time donors was estimated at 0.32 transmissions per million (10(6)) packed red blood cell transfusions (95% CI, 0.29-0.65 transmissions/10(6) transfusions) before and 0.35 transmissions/10(5) transfusions (95% CI, 0.31-0.65 transmissions/10(6) transfusions) after implementation. The difference was not statistically significant. Factors associated with incident infection were the same in each period. We observed no increase in HIV incidence or HIV transfusion transmission risk after implementation of a 12-month MSM deferral policy.

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