4 research outputs found

    Avaliação de marcadores sorológicos treponêmicos e não-treponêmicos em doadores inaptos para sífilis atendidos em um hemocentro brasileiro

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    RESUMOIntrodução: A sífilis é uma doença infecciosa sistêmica de evolução crônica, causada pela bactéria Treponema pallidum, que pode ser transmitida por transfusões de sangue. A avaliação dos marcadores sorológicos na triagem para sífilis em doadores de sangue é fundamental para confirmar se o sangue doado pode estar contaminado com T. pallidum ou se há descarte por reações inespecíficas.  O objetivo deste trabalho foi descrever os resultados obtidos em testes sorológicos não-treponêmicos e treponêmicos e o perfil sociodemográfico dos doadores de sangue em um hemocentro brasileiro. Métodos: A população foi composta por doadores de sangue atendidos em todas as unidades do Hemopa, que atenderam aos critérios do estudo. Houve análise dos resultados obtidos através do VDRL e ELISA e informações socioeconômicas sobre a população: sexo, idade, escolaridade e estado civil, obtidos a partir do registro de doadores. Resultados: Durante o período do estudo, houve 103.187 doações de sangue. Um total de 883 doadores foram considerados inaptos para sífilis no teste de triagem (0,86%) e 271 pessoas (30,69%) compareceram ao hemocentro para realização de testes confirmatórios: 50,6% homens; 49,4% mulheres; idade média de 34 anos. Mais da metade declarou ter ensino médio completo e a maioria (75,6%) relatou ser solteiro. Mais de 50% dos doadores apresentaram titulação menor que 1/16; 91,5% também apresentou reatividade em ELISA. 15 pessoas (5,5%) apresentaram outro resultado reagente além da sífilis. Conclusão: Houve mais de 90% de resultados concordantes entre teste treponêmico e não-treponêmico em nossa triagem laboratorial. Esses resultados podem auxiliar instituições na estratégia de triagem para sífilis em doadores de sangue.Palavras-chave: Sífilis; doadores de sangue; seleção do doador; testes laboratoriais; segurança do sangue; hemoterapi

    Prevalence, incidence and residual risk of transfusion-transmitted HBV infection before and after the implementation of HBV-NAT in northern Brazil.

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    BACKGROUND:Nucleic acid testing (NAT) for virus detection during blood screening has helped to prevent transfusion-transmitted infections worldwide. In northern Brazil, NAT was implemented in 2012 for HIV and HCV and more recently, in January 2015, the screening for HBV was included and currently used concomitant with serological tests (HBsAg and anti-HBc). This study aims to evaluate the prevalence and the incidence of HBV infection among voluntary blood donors at ten regional blood centers of HEMOPA Foundation in Pará state and to compare the residual risk of transfusion-transmitted HBV infection before and after the Brazilian HBV-NAT implementation. METHODS:The prevalence (restricted to first time donors- FT) and seroconversion rate (restricted to repeat donors- RP) of HBV were calculated based on rates of confirmed positive samples. Residual risk was based on the incidence and window period (WP) model described by Schreiber and coauthors. Logistic and Poisson regression were used in the statistical analysis by SPSS v20.0. A p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS:HBV prevalence in the periods before and after the implementation of HBV-NAT were 247 and 251 per 100,000 donations, respectively. Seroconversion rates were 114 and 122 per 100,000 donations in the two periods, respectively. The residual risk (RR) for HBV decreased significantly in the posterior period to the HBV-NAT implementation, when compared to RR before implementation, with a reduction of 1:144,92 to 1:294,11 donations (p <0,001). CONCLUSIONS:The RR to HBV decreased after the implementation of HBV-NAT, increasing significantly the transfusional security in the North region of Brazil at HEMOPA Foundation

    Prevalence of Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika Viruses in Blood Donors in the State of Pará, Northern Brazil: 2018–2020

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    Arboviruses have been reported over the years as constant threats to blood transfusion recipients, given the high occurrence of asymptomatic cases and the fact that the presence of viremia precedes the onset of symptoms, making it possible that infected blood from donors act as a source of dissemination. This work aims to identify the prevalence of dengue virus (DENV), Zika virus (ZIKV) and Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection in blood donors during epidemic and non-epidemic periods; classify the donor as symptomatic or asymptomatic; and verify the need to include DENV, CHIKV and ZIKV in the nucleic acid test (NAT) platform in northern Brazil. We investigated 36,133 thousand donations in two years of collection in Northern Brazil. One donor was positive for DENV and one for CHIKV (0.002% prevalence). As the prevalence for arboviruses was low in this study, it would not justify the individual screening of samples from donors in a blood bank. Thus, DENV- and CHIKV-positive samples were simulated in different amounts of sample pools, and both were safely detected by molecular biology even in a pool of 14 samples, which would meet the need to include these three viruses in the routine of blood centers in endemic countries such as Brazil

    Núcleos de Ensino da Unesp: artigos 2008

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    Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq
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