The prevalence of hepatitis B virus, human T‐lymphotropic virus and human immunodeficiency virus in patients receiving blood transfusions in South Africa

Author:

Willemse Reynier J.12ORCID,Grobler Christa J.2,Murphy Edward L.34,Roubinian Nareg345,Colemen Charl1,Machaba Solly1,Vermeulen Marion16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Transfusion Medicine and Technical services South African National Blood Service Johannesburg South Africa

2. Faculty of Computer and Applied Sciences, Health Science Department Vaal University of Technology (VUT) Vereeniging South Africa

3. Departments of Laboratory Medicine and Epidemiology/Biostatistics University of California San Francisco (UCSF) San Francisco California USA

4. Vitalant Research Institute San Francisco California USA

5. Division of Research Kaiser Permanente Northern California Pleasanton California USA

6. School of Clinical Medicine University of the Free State Bloemfontein South Africa

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesSouth Africa has a high prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV) and to a lesser extent human T‐lymphotropic virus (HTLV). Each of these agents is transfusion‐transmissible (TT) but deciding whether to implement preventive screening depends upon knowledge of background prevalence in transfused patients. We determined the prevalence of HIV, HBV and HTLV I/II among blood transfusion recipients in South African hospitals.Materials and MethodsWe obtained identity‐unlinked samples used for blood cross‐matching at 634 South African hospitals served by the South African National Blood Service (SANBS). The ABBOTT Alinity S® Immunochemiluminescent system measured HIV, HBV and HTLV I/II antibodies. Repeatedly reactive samples were confirmed using the Roche Cobas® 8000. Logistic regression was performed to investigate the determinants of associations for HIV, HBV and HTLV infections.ResultsThe overall prevalences of HIV, HBV and HTLV were 37.8%, 7.4% and 0.6%, respectively. The HIV prevalence in blood recipients was twice as high as general population estimates. Public hospital patients had a significantly higher prevalence compared with private hospital patients for HIV and HBV. HIV prevalence was significantly higher in females, and HBV prevalence was significantly higher in males, excluding the unknown gender results.ConclusionPatients receiving blood transfusions in South Africa have high rates of HIV and HBV infection that should be taken into consideration when determining donor screening strategies for other viral infections. Measurable prevalence of HTLV indicates endemicity of this infection in South Africa.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference25 articles.

1. UNAIDS.HIV and AIDS in South Africa. Availble at:https://www.avert.org/professionals/hiv-around-world/sub-saharan-africa/south-africa. Last accessed 01 Aug 2017

2. Preventing hepatitis B and hepatocellular carcinoma in South Africa: The case for a birth-dose vaccine

3. Estimations of worldwide prevalence of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: a systematic review of data published between 1965 and 2013

4. Prevalence and transmission of HTLV‐I infection in Natal/KwaZulu;Bhigjee A;S Afr Med J,1993

5. Use of Blood Donor Screening to Monitor Prevalence of HIV and Hepatitis B and C Viruses, South Africa

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