Prevalence and Trends in Hepatitis B & C Virus among Blood Donors in Pakistan: A Regional Transfusion Center Study

Author:

Zorob Tehreem12,Farooqi Muhammad Awais13,Ahsan Ali4,Zaki Abdullah5,Rathore Muhammad Ali1,Farooqi Hafiz Muhammad Umer6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Virology, Armed Forces Institute of Transfusion, National University of Medical Sciences, Rawalpindi 46000, Pakistan

2. Department of Life Sciences, Abasyn University Islamabad Campus, Islamabad 44000, Pakistan

3. Department of Mechatronics Engineering, Jeju National University, Jeju-si 63243, Republic of Korea

4. Graduate School of Science, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 558-0022, Japan

5. Department of Neurology, Shifa International Hospital, Sector H-8, Islamabad 44000, Pakistan

6. Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA

Abstract

Around 118.5 million blood donations are collected annually to save precious lives. The donated blood may also be associated with blood-borne infections. With around 247 million population, Pakistan is an endemic country for viral hepatitis, and there is a high risk of having asymptomatic blood donors among healthy donors. Viral hepatitis is 2.5% prevalent in the general population, and blood donation and its screening have become grave health concerns for Pakistani health authorities. Asymptomatic viral hepatitis needs screening to rule out subliminally diseased individuals, as recommended by the World Health Organization. Knowing the prevalence of the transfusion transmissible infectious (TTIs) agents in healthy blood donors helps assess the disease burden in any population, boosts treatment rates, and precludes dreaded complications in the affected people. The objective of the current study was to determine the prevalence and trends of significant TTIs among blood donors visiting the Armed Forces Institute of Transfusion (AFIT), Rawalpindi, Pakistan. A total of 15,405 blood donors were screened for HBV, HCV, HIV, malaria, and syphilis during this cross-sectional descriptive study. Most donors had an O-positive blood group; AB-negative donors were only 0.7%. Out of the study population, we reported 1.06% HBV, 0.54% HCV, 0.19% HIV, and 0.31% syphilis-positive asymptomatic blood donors. However, no blood donor was found positive for malaria. The Punjab province was reported as the most burdened for TTIs, and youngsters aged 18–27 years were mainly positive, indicating the need to conduct national-level awareness campaigns about TTIs. The stakeholders need to strengthen the blood collection guidelines, and effective performance should be strictly monitored through internal and external audits considering the aim of reaching non-infectious blood products.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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