Volume 54, Issue 6 pp. 1660-1665
BLOOD DONORS AND BLOOD COLLECTION

Acute hepatitis B in blood donors over a 5-year period in England and North Wales: who is getting infected?

Gillian K. Rosenberg

Gillian K. Rosenberg

National Transfusion Microbiology Laboratories, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

Blood Borne Virus Unit, Virus Reference Department, Microbiology Services, Public Health England, London, UK

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Sam Lattimore

Sam Lattimore

NHS Blood and Transplant/Public Health England Epidemiology Unit, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

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Susan R. Brailsford

Susan R. Brailsford

NHS Blood and Transplant/Public Health England Epidemiology Unit, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

Clinical Transfusion Microbiology, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

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Patricia E. Hewitt

Patricia E. Hewitt

Clinical Transfusion Microbiology, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

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Kate I. Tettmar

Kate I. Tettmar

National Transfusion Microbiology Laboratories, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

Blood Borne Virus Unit, Virus Reference Department, Microbiology Services, Public Health England, London, UK

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Alan D. Kitchen

Alan D. Kitchen

National Transfusion Microbiology Reference Laboratory, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

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Samreen Ijaz

Samreen Ijaz

Blood Borne Virus Unit, Virus Reference Department, Microbiology Services, Public Health England, London, UK

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Richard S. Tedder

Corresponding Author

Richard S. Tedder

National Transfusion Microbiology Laboratories, NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK

Blood Borne Virus Unit, Virus Reference Department, Microbiology Services, Public Health England, London, UK

Division of Infection and Immunity, University College London, London, UK

Address reprint requests to: Richard S. Tedder, Blood Borne Virus Unit, Virus Reference Department, Microbiology Services Division, Public Health England, 61 Colindale Avenue, London NW9 5EQ, UK; e-mail [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
First published: 26 November 2013
Citations: 2
Jointly funded by National Health Service Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) and Public Health England (PHE) Colindale.

Abstract

Background

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains the infection most frequently recognized by donation testing in blood donors. It is usually a persistent infection and mostly reflects the country of origin of the donor or the donor's family. There are, however, a minority of acute infections and this study undertook their phylogenetic analysis to determine the likely source of infection.

Study Design and Methods

Plasma samples from 11 donors donating between July 2005 and June 2010, whose test results revealed recent infection with hepatitis B, were available for further analysis. Plasma DNA was extracted, amplified, sequenced, and analyzed phylogenetically. Donor and virus characteristics were compared with the overall demography of all hepatitis B–infected donors attending over the same period.

Results

Three of the 11 individuals were first-time donors. Nine were male, of whom eight were white British. All had serum markers of very recent infection. Only two indicated known HBV exclusion risk factors at postdonation discussion not declared previously. Genotype A was present in seven, Genotype B in two, and Genotype C in two, contrasting with the pattern in persistently infected persons in the United Kingdom. A single A2 strain was identified in six of the white British male donors, suggesting epidemiologic linkage.

Conclusion

Phylogenetic analysis of HBV-infected donors performed in real time can potentially lead to identification of undeclared risk factors that donor health questionnaires may fail to identify.

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