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Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations

Nucleic acid testing (NAT) was implemented in Poland in 1999 for screening of plasma for fractionation and for all blood donors in 2002. To analyze seronegative NAT‐positive samples representing hepatitis C virus (HCV) window‐period (WP) in the years 2000 to 2016 and to determine infection outcome....

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Autores principales: Grabarczyk, Piotr, Kubicka‐Russel, Dorota, Kopacz, Aneta, Liszewski, Grzegorz, Sulkowska, Ewa, Zwolińska, Paulina, Madaliński, Kazimierz, Marek, Maciej, Szabelewska, Małgorzata, Świątek, Ewa, Laskus, Tomasz, Radkowski, Marek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7003774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31670401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.25617
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author Grabarczyk, Piotr
Kubicka‐Russel, Dorota
Kopacz, Aneta
Liszewski, Grzegorz
Sulkowska, Ewa
Zwolińska, Paulina
Madaliński, Kazimierz
Marek, Maciej
Szabelewska, Małgorzata
Świątek, Ewa
Laskus, Tomasz
Radkowski, Marek
author_facet Grabarczyk, Piotr
Kubicka‐Russel, Dorota
Kopacz, Aneta
Liszewski, Grzegorz
Sulkowska, Ewa
Zwolińska, Paulina
Madaliński, Kazimierz
Marek, Maciej
Szabelewska, Małgorzata
Świątek, Ewa
Laskus, Tomasz
Radkowski, Marek
author_sort Grabarczyk, Piotr
collection PubMed
description Nucleic acid testing (NAT) was implemented in Poland in 1999 for screening of plasma for fractionation and for all blood donors in 2002. To analyze seronegative NAT‐positive samples representing hepatitis C virus (HCV) window‐period (WP) in the years 2000 to 2016 and to determine infection outcome. We analyzed results of 17 502 739 donations screened in minipools (6‐48) or individually. Index samples underwent viral load (VL) quantification, genotyping and Ag, and anti‐HCV re‐testing using chemiluminescence (CMIA), electrochemiluminescence (ECLIA), and fourth‐generation enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (IV EIA) assays. HCV‐seronegative infections were identified in 126 donations (7.2/mln donations; 95% confidential intervals, 6.0‐8.6). Frequency of NAT yields was decreasing over time. Of the initial 126 seronegative index cases 106 were retested: 32.1% were reactive in IV EIA, 11.3% in ECLIA, and 1.9% in CMIA. The lowest VL correlated with absent anti‐HCV and HCV Ag, while VL was highest when the antigen was detectable and then it decreased when anti‐HCV appeared at a level detectable by sensitive third generation tests while retesting. The proportion of genotype 1 was 38.9% in samples positive only for HCV RNA and 71.4% in samples that were anti‐HCV reactive in re‐testing. In parallel, genotype 3 frequency was 50% in the former group and 21% in the latter. NAT is an effective measure to limit HCV transmission by transfusion and IV EIA seems to have higher clinical sensitivity than ECLIA. Samples representing likely successive phases of early HCV infection were characterized by different genotype distribution probably due to very early elimination of genotype 3.
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spelling pubmed-70037742020-02-10 Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations Grabarczyk, Piotr Kubicka‐Russel, Dorota Kopacz, Aneta Liszewski, Grzegorz Sulkowska, Ewa Zwolińska, Paulina Madaliński, Kazimierz Marek, Maciej Szabelewska, Małgorzata Świątek, Ewa Laskus, Tomasz Radkowski, Marek J Med Virol Research Articles Nucleic acid testing (NAT) was implemented in Poland in 1999 for screening of plasma for fractionation and for all blood donors in 2002. To analyze seronegative NAT‐positive samples representing hepatitis C virus (HCV) window‐period (WP) in the years 2000 to 2016 and to determine infection outcome. We analyzed results of 17 502 739 donations screened in minipools (6‐48) or individually. Index samples underwent viral load (VL) quantification, genotyping and Ag, and anti‐HCV re‐testing using chemiluminescence (CMIA), electrochemiluminescence (ECLIA), and fourth‐generation enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (IV EIA) assays. HCV‐seronegative infections were identified in 126 donations (7.2/mln donations; 95% confidential intervals, 6.0‐8.6). Frequency of NAT yields was decreasing over time. Of the initial 126 seronegative index cases 106 were retested: 32.1% were reactive in IV EIA, 11.3% in ECLIA, and 1.9% in CMIA. The lowest VL correlated with absent anti‐HCV and HCV Ag, while VL was highest when the antigen was detectable and then it decreased when anti‐HCV appeared at a level detectable by sensitive third generation tests while retesting. The proportion of genotype 1 was 38.9% in samples positive only for HCV RNA and 71.4% in samples that were anti‐HCV reactive in re‐testing. In parallel, genotype 3 frequency was 50% in the former group and 21% in the latter. NAT is an effective measure to limit HCV transmission by transfusion and IV EIA seems to have higher clinical sensitivity than ECLIA. Samples representing likely successive phases of early HCV infection were characterized by different genotype distribution probably due to very early elimination of genotype 3. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-11-21 2020-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7003774/ /pubmed/31670401 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.25617 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Journal of Medical Virology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Grabarczyk, Piotr
Kubicka‐Russel, Dorota
Kopacz, Aneta
Liszewski, Grzegorz
Sulkowska, Ewa
Zwolińska, Paulina
Madaliński, Kazimierz
Marek, Maciej
Szabelewska, Małgorzata
Świątek, Ewa
Laskus, Tomasz
Radkowski, Marek
Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title_full Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title_fullStr Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title_full_unstemmed Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title_short Seronegative hepatitis C virus infection in Polish blood donors—Virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
title_sort seronegative hepatitis c virus infection in polish blood donors—virological characteristics of index donations and follow‐up observations
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7003774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31670401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.25617
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