McFarland W, Mvere D, Shandera W, Reingold A
Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California, San Francisco 94102, USA.
Vox Sang. 1997;72(2):85-92. doi: 10.1046/j.1423-0410.1997.7220085.x.
Compared to industrialised nations, countries in sub-Saharan Africa experience a greater amount of transfusion-associated HIV transmission due to high rates of transfusion in some groups of patients, a higher incidence and prevalence of HIV infection in donor populations, a lack of HIV antibody screening in some areas, and a higher residual risk of contamination in blood supplies despite antibody screening.
Epidemiologic review.
Epidemiologic evidence supports the effectiveness of three relatively inexpensive strategies to prevent transfusion-associated HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa: HIV antibody screening, avoidance of unnecessary use of blood products, and exclusion of donors at high risk of infection. Such prevention strategies have not been universally implemented.
International aid to establish and maintain HIV antibody screening programmes, implementation of sound criteria for transfusion, and the search for HIV risk factors to use as donor exclusion criteria must be expanded in the region.
与工业化国家相比,撒哈拉以南非洲国家因部分患者群体输血率高、献血人群中艾滋病毒感染发病率和患病率较高、一些地区缺乏艾滋病毒抗体筛查以及尽管进行了抗体筛查但血液供应中仍存在较高的残留污染风险,导致输血相关艾滋病毒传播的情况更为严重。
流行病学综述。
流行病学证据支持三种相对廉价的策略在撒哈拉以南非洲预防输血相关艾滋病毒传播的有效性:艾滋病毒抗体筛查、避免不必要地使用血液制品以及排除感染风险高的献血者。此类预防策略尚未得到普遍实施。
必须在该地区扩大国际援助,以建立和维持艾滋病毒抗体筛查项目、实施合理的输血标准,并寻找艾滋病毒风险因素作为献血者排除标准。