Vermeulen Marion, Lelie Nico, Coleman Charl, Sykes Wendy, Jacobs Genevieve, Swanevelder Ronel, Busch Michael, van Zyl Gert, Grebe Eduard, Welte Alex, Reddy Ravi
South African National Blood Service, Roodepoort, South Africa.
Lelie Research, Alkmaar, The Netherlands.
Transfusion. 2019 Jan;59(1):267-276. doi: 10.1111/trf.14959. Epub 2018 Sep 28.
In 1998 we estimated that 34/million infectious window period donations were entering the blood supply at the South African National Blood Service. Selective use of donations based on donor race-ethnicity reduced this risk to 26/million donations but was deemed unethical. Consequently, in 2005 South African National Blood Service eliminated race-ethnicity-based collection policies and implemented individual-donation nucleic acid testing (ID-NAT). We describe the change in donor base demographics, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) detection rates, and transfusion-transmissible HIV risk.
In ten years 7.7 million donations were tested for anti-HIV and HIV RNA. Number of donations, HIV prevalence, ID-NAT yield rate, serology yield rate and residual transfusion-transmissible HIV risk were analyzed by donor type, race-ethnicity, age, and sex. Multiple regression analysis was performed to investigate the determinants of HIV-positive and nucleic acid testing yield donations.
The combined strategy of increasing donations from black donors and implementing ID-NAT increased the proportion of donations from black donors from 6% in 2005 to 30% in 2015 (p < 0.00001), and reduced the transfusion-transmissible risk from 24 to 13 per million transfusions. ID-NAT interdicted 481 (1:16,100) seronegative window period donations, while one transfusion-transmissible case (0.13 per million) was documented. Race-ethnicity and donor type were highly significant predictors of HIV positivity, with adjusted odds ratio for first-time donors of 12.5 (95% confidence interval, 11.9-13.1) and for black race-ethnicity of 31.1 (95% confidence interval, 28.9-33.4). The proportion of serology yields among HIV-infected donors increased from 0.27% to 2.4%.
ID-NAT enabled the South African National Blood Service to increase the number of donations from black donors fivefold while enhancing the safety of the blood supply.
1998年,我们估计南非国家血液服务中心有34/百万份处于感染窗口期的献血进入血液供应体系。基于献血者种族-民族进行选择性献血,可将这种风险降至26/百万份献血,但这种做法被认为不符合伦理道德。因此,2005年南非国家血液服务中心取消了基于种族-民族的采血政策,并实施了单份献血核酸检测(ID-NAT)。我们描述了献血者群体人口统计学特征的变化、人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)检测率以及输血传播HIV的风险。
在十年间,对770万份献血进行了抗HIV和HIV RNA检测。按献血者类型、种族-民族、年龄和性别分析了献血数量、HIV流行率、ID-NAT检出率、血清学检出率以及残余输血传播HIV风险。进行多元回归分析以研究HIV阳性献血和核酸检测阳性献血的决定因素。
增加黑人献血者献血量并实施ID-NAT的联合策略,使黑人献血者的献血比例从2005年的6%增至2015年的30%(p<0.00001),并将输血传播风险从每百万次输血24例降至13例。ID-NAT阻断了481份(1:16,100)血清学阴性的窗口期献血,同时记录到1例输血传播病例(每百万例0.13例)。种族-民族和献血者类型是HIV阳性的高度显著预测因素,首次献血者的调整优势比为12.5(95%置信区间,11.9 - 13.1),黑人种族-民族的调整优势比为31.1(95%置信区间,28.9 - 33.4)。HIV感染献血者中血清学检出比例从0.27%增至2.4%。
ID-NAT使南非国家血液服务中心能够将黑人献血者的献血量增加五倍,同时提高了血液供应的安全性。