Blood donation screening for hepatitis B virus core antibodies: The importance of confirmatory testing and initial implication for rare blood donor groups

Author:

Fu Michael X.1ORCID,Ingram Jennifer2,Roberts Courtney3,Nurmi Visa14,Watkins Emma5,Dempsey Nina6,Golubchik Tanya17,Breuer Judith8,Brailsford Su9ORCID,Irving William L.10ORCID,Andersson Monique1112ORCID,Simmonds Peter1ORCID,Harvala Heli8912ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Donor Testing Department NHS Blood and Transplant Manchester UK

3. Donor Testing Department NHS Blood and Transplant Filton UK

4. Department of Virology, Faculty of Medicine University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

5. Clinical Services NHS Blood and Transplant Birmingham UK

6. Department of Life Sciences Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

7. Sydney Infectious Diseases Institute, Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Sydney Australia

8. Division of Infection and Immunity University College London London UK

9. Microbiology Services NHS Blood and Transplant Colindale UK

10. NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and the University of Nottingham Nottingham UK

11. Department of Microbiology Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Oxford UK

12. Radcliffe Department of Medicine University of Oxford Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesExclusion of blood donors with hepatitis B virus (HBV) core antibodies (anti‐HBc) prevents transfusion‐transmitted HBV infection but can lead to significant donor loss. As isolated anti‐HBc positivity does not always indicate true past HBV infection, we have investigated the effectiveness of confirmatory anti‐HBc testing and the representation of rare blood groups in anti‐HBc‐positive donors.Materials and MethodsThree hundred ninety‐seven HBV surface antigen‐negative and anti‐HBc initially reactive blood donor samples were tested by five different anti‐HBc assays.ResultsEighty percentage of samples reactive in Architect anti‐HBc assay were positive by the Murex assay and anti‐HBc neutralization. Eleven out of 397 samples showed discordant results in supplementary testing from the Murex confirmatory test result, and five remained undetermined following extensive serological testing. Thirty‐eight percentage of anti‐HBc‐positive donors identified as minority ethnic groups compared with 11% representation in anti‐HBc‐negative donors (p < 0.0001); the frequency of the Ro blood group in anti‐HBc‐positive donors was 18 times higher in non‐white ethnic groups.ConclusionUsing two anti‐HBc assays effectively enabled the identification of HBV‐exposed and potentially infectious donors, their deferral and potential clinical follow‐up. However, the exclusion of confirmed anti‐HBc‐positive donors will still impact the supply of rare blood such as Ro.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

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