Gill M J, Meyers G, Rajwani A
Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alta.
CMAJ. 1994 Oct 15;151(8):1147-51.
To determine whether previous blood donations from HIV-positive patients posed a threat to recipients.
Interviewer-administered questionnaire survey.
Regional HIV outpatient referral clinic for southern Alberta.
All 478 patients attending the clinic from May 1, 1993, to Mar. 31, 1994; 366 were excluded: 335 had not donated blood, and 31 could not provide reliable information regarding possible donations.
Patients were asked at a routine clinic visit regarding the dates, frequency and location of previous blood donations. The Canadian Red Cross was informed, with patient consent, if the previous donations posed a potential risk of HIV transmission.
Number of HIV-positive patients whose donations posed a possible or definite risk to recipients.
A total of 545 units of blood had been donated by the 112 patients in the study; 57 units (donated by 29 patients) posed a possible risk, and 12 (given by 11 patients) posed a definite risk of HIV transmission to the recipients. Thirty-two of these donors had been unknown to the Red Cross through its "look-back" and "trace-back" protocols. Only 1 of the 13 patients found to be HIV positive by the Red Cross openly admitted donating blood to undergo HIV antibody testing; the remainder were either ill-informed or did not perceive themselves to be at risk. The patients were highly mobile, 36.7% donating blood at some time in a province other than the one where they had received their positive HIV test result.
Asking HIV-positive patients about their blood donation history, although subject to recall bias, is a simple and inexpensive method for identifying high-risk blood donations. The Red Cross should routinely be notified, with patient consent, of all donations posing a risk in order to enhance the prospect for identifying HIV-positive blood recipients.
确定既往HIV阳性患者的献血是否对受血者构成威胁。
访谈员实施的问卷调查。
艾伯塔省南部的地区HIV门诊转诊诊所。
1993年5月1日至1994年3月31日在该诊所就诊的所有478例患者;366例被排除:335例未曾献血,31例无法提供有关可能献血的可靠信息。
在常规门诊就诊时询问患者既往献血的日期、频率和地点。经患者同意后,若既往献血存在HIV传播的潜在风险,则通知加拿大红十字会。
其献血对受血者构成可能或确定风险的HIV阳性患者数量。
研究中的112例患者共献血545单位;57单位(由29例患者捐献)存在可能风险,12单位(由11例患者捐献)存在确定的HIV传播给受血者的风险。这些献血者中有32例通过红十字会的“回顾”和“追溯”程序未被发现。红十字会发现的13例HIV阳性患者中,只有1例公开承认献血以进行HIV抗体检测;其余患者要么了解情况不足,要么未意识到自己有风险。这些患者流动性很大,36.7%的患者在某个时间在其HIV检测呈阳性的省份以外的其他省份献血。
询问HIV阳性患者的献血史,尽管存在回忆偏倚,但仍是识别高危献血的一种简单且低成本的方法。经患者同意后,应常规通知红十字会所有存在风险的献血情况,以提高识别HIV阳性受血者的可能性。