NAT for HBV and anti-HBc testing increase blood safety

Transfusion. 2002 Jul;42(7):869-75. doi: 10.1046/j.1537-2995.2002.00128.x.

Abstract

Background: Routine HBV PCR screening of blood donations to our institutes was introduced in January 1997 to complete the NAT screening program for transfusion-relevant viruses. Testing was successively extended to customer transfusion services with a total of 1,300,000 samples tested per year.

Study design and methods: Minipools of 96 blood donation samples were formed by automatic pipettors. HBsAg-reactive samples were included. HBV particles were enriched from the minipools by centrifugation. Conventional and in-house TaqMan PCRs were successively applied for HBV amplification. Sensitivity reached 1000 genome equivalents per mL for each individual donation. Confirmatory single-sample and single-sample enrichment PCRs were established with sensitivities of 300 and 5 to 10 genome equivalents per mL, respectively.

Results: After screening of 3.6 million donor samples, 6 HBV PCR-positive, HBsAg-negative donations were identified. Two samples were from infected donors who had not seroconverted and four were from chronic anti-HBc-positive low-level HBV carriers. Retesting by single-sample PCR of 432 samples confirmed positive for HBsAg identified 37 donations that were negative in minipool PCR. Donor-directed look-back procedures indicated that no infected donor who had not yet seroconverted was missed by minipool PCR. However, recipient-directed look-back procedures revealed two anti-HBc-positive recipients of HBsAg-negative minipool PCR-negative, anti-HBc-positive and single-sample PCR-positive blood components. After testing randomly selected 729 HBsAg-negative minipool PCR-negative, anti-HBc-positive donors by single-sample enrichment PCR, 7 were identified with < or = 10 HBV particles per mL of donor plasma.

Conclusion: Minipool PCR testing after virus enrichment was sensitive enough to identify HBsAg-negative donors who had seroconverterd and HBsAg-negative, anti-HBc-positive chronic HBV carriers. HBV NAT in conjunction with anti-HBc screening would reduce the residual risk of transfusion-transmitted HBV infection.

MeSH terms

  • Antibodies, Viral / blood
  • Blood / virology
  • Blood Banking / methods
  • Blood Banks / standards
  • Blood Donors
  • Blood Transfusion / standards
  • Consumer Product Safety
  • DNA, Viral / blood
  • Germany
  • Hepatitis B / diagnosis
  • Hepatitis B / transmission
  • Hepatitis B Core Antigens / immunology*
  • Hepatitis B Surface Antigens / immunology
  • Hepatitis B virus / genetics*
  • Humans
  • Mass Screening / methods
  • Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques / standards*
  • Sensitivity and Specificity

Substances

  • Antibodies, Viral
  • DNA, Viral
  • Hepatitis B Core Antigens
  • Hepatitis B Surface Antigens