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High prevalence of anti-hepatitis e virus antibodies among blood donors in central Italy, february to march 2014
Authors
R. Bruni
P. Chionne
+12 more
A. R. Ciccaglione
L. Dell’Orso
G. L. La Rosa
C. Lucarelli
E. Madonna
C. Marcantonio
P. Pezzotti
GIOVANNI BATTISTA PISANI
K. Ragone
E Spada
Gloria TALIANI
C. Tomei
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)'
Doi
Abstract
Prevalence of anti-hepatitis E virus (HEV) antibodies is highly variable in developed countries, which seems partly due to differences in assay sensitivity. Using validated sensitive assays, we tested 313 blood donors attending a hospital transfusion unit in central Italy in January and February 2014 for anti-HEV IgG and IgM and HEV RNA. Data on HEV exposure were collected from all donors. Overall anti-HEV IgG prevalence was 49% (153/313). Eating raw dried pig-liver sausage was the only independent predictor of HEV infection (adjusted prevalence rate ratio = 2.14; 95% confidence interval: 1.23–3.74). Three donors were positive for either anti-HEV IgM (n = 2; 0.6%) or HEV RNA (n = 2; 0.6%); they were completely asymptomatic, without alanine aminotransferase (ALT) abnormalities. Of the two HEV RNA-positive donors (both harbouring genotype 3), one was anti-HEV IgG- and IgM-positive, the other was anti-HEV IgG- and IgM-negative. The third donor was positive for anti-HEV IgG and IgM but HEV RNA-negative. HEV infection is therefore hyperendemic among blood donors (80% men 18–64 years-old) from central Italy and associated with local dietary habits. Nearly 1% of donors have acute or recent infection, implying potential transmission to blood recipients. Neither ALT nor anti-HEV IgM testing seems useful to prevent transfusion-transmitted HEV infection. © 2016, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control
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info:doi/10.2807%2F1560-7917.e...
Last time updated on 01/04/2019
Archivio della ricerca- Università di Roma La Sapienza
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Last time updated on 08/02/2017