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预防输血传播感染。

Prevention of transfusion-transmitted infections.

机构信息

Vitalant Research Institute (formerly Blood Systems Reseach Institute), San Francisco, CA.

Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.

出版信息

Blood. 2019 Apr 25;133(17):1854-1864. doi: 10.1182/blood-2018-11-833996. Epub 2019 Feb 26.

Abstract

Since the 1970s, introduction of serological assays targeting virus-specific antibodies and antigens has been effective in identifying blood donations infected with the classic transfusion-transmitted infectious agents (TTIs; hepatitis B virus [HBV], HIV, human T-cell lymphotropic virus types I and II, hepatitis C virus [HCV]). Subsequently, progressive implementation of nucleic acid-amplification technology (NAT) screening for HIV, HCV, and HBV has reduced the residual risk of infectious-window-period donations, such that per unit risks are <1 in 1 000 000 in the United States, other high-income countries, and in high-incidence regions performing NAT. NAT screening has emerged as the preferred option for detection of newer TTIs including West Nile virus, Zika virus (ZIKV), and Although there is continual need to monitor current risks due to established TTI, ongoing challenges in blood safety relate primarily to surveillance for emerging agents coupled with development of rapid response mechanisms when such agents are identified. Recent progress in development and implementation of pathogen-reduction technologies (PRTs) provide the opportunity for proactive rather than reactive response to blood-safety threats. Risk-based decision-making tools and cost-effectiveness models have proved useful to quantify infectious risks and place new interventions in context. However, as evidenced by the 2015 to 2017 ZIKV pandemic, a level of tolerable risk has yet to be defined in such a way that conflicting factors (eg, theoretical recipient risk, blood availability, cost, and commercial interests) can be reconciled. A unified approach to TTIs is needed, whereby novel tests and PRTs replace, rather than add to, existing interventions, thereby ameliorating cost and logistical burden to blood centers and hospitals.

摘要

自 20 世纪 70 年代以来,针对病毒特异性抗体和抗原的血清学检测方法的引入,有效地识别了感染经典输血传播感染因子(TTIs;乙型肝炎病毒 [HBV]、HIV、人 T 细胞嗜淋巴细胞病毒 I 和 II 型、丙型肝炎病毒 [HCV])的血液捐献。随后,核酸扩增技术(NAT)筛查 HIV、HCV 和 HBV 的逐步实施,降低了感染窗口期血液捐献的残余风险,使得在美国、其他高收入国家和进行 NAT 的高发病率地区,每单位风险 <1/1000000。NAT 筛查已成为检测包括西尼罗河病毒、寨卡病毒(ZIKV)和其他新 TTIs 的首选方法。尽管由于已建立的 TTI 仍需持续监测当前风险,但血液安全方面的持续挑战主要涉及对新兴病原体的监测,以及在确定此类病原体时建立快速反应机制。病原体减少技术(PRT)的开发和实施的最新进展为积极主动而非被动应对血液安全威胁提供了机会。基于风险的决策工具和成本效益模型已被证明有助于量化感染风险,并使新干预措施具有现实意义。然而,正如 2015 年至 2017 年寨卡病毒流行所证明的那样,在这种情况下,还需要确定一个可接受的风险水平,以使相互冲突的因素(例如,理论上的受者风险、血液供应、成本和商业利益)得以协调。需要采用一种统一的方法来处理 TTIs,即用新型检测和 PRT 替代而不是增加现有的干预措施,从而减轻血液中心和医院的成本和后勤负担。

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