Hepatitis E virus seropositivity in an ethnically diverse community blood donor population

Author:

Mah Jordan K.1ORCID,Keck MeiLe12,Chu Daniel Y.12,Sooryanarain Harini3,Sahoo Malaya K.1,Lau Patrick1,Huang ChunHong1,Weber Jenna1,Belanger Geoffrey A.2,Keck Zhenyong1,Shan Hua1,Meng Xiang‐Jin3,Foung Steven K. H.1,Pinsky Benjamin A.14,Pham Tho D.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

2. Stanford Blood Center Stanford Health Care Palo Alto California USA

3. Virginia‐Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Blacksburg Virginia USA

4. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesHepatitis E virus (HEV) is an underrecognized and emerging infectious disease that may threaten the safety of donor blood supply in many parts of the world. We sought to elucidate whether our local community blood supply is at increased susceptibility for transmission of transfusion‐associated HEV infections.Materials and MethodsWe screened 10,002 randomly selected donations over an 8‐month period between 2017 and 2018 at the Stanford Blood Center for markers of HEV infection using commercial IgM/IgG serological tests and reverse transcriptase quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays (RT‐qPCR). Donor demographic information, including gender, age, self‐identified ethnicity, location of residence and recent travel, were obtained from the donor database and used to generate multivariate binary logistic regressions for risk factors of IgG seropositivity.ResultsA total of 10,002 blood donations from 7507 unique donors were screened, and there was no detectable HEV RNA by RT‐qPCR. The overall seropositivity rate was 12.1% for IgG and 0.56% for IgM. Multivariate analysis of unique donors revealed a significantly higher risk of IgG seropositivity with increasing age, White/Asian ethnicities and residence in certain local counties.ConclusionAlthough HEV IgG seroprevalence in the San Francisco Bay Area is consistent with ongoing infection, the screening of a large donor population did not identify any viraemic blood donors. While HEV is an underrecognized and emerging infection in other regions, there is no evidence to support routine blood screening for HEV in our local blood supply currently; however, periodic monitoring may still be required to assess the ongoing risk.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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