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Infectious disease screening of blood products for prevention of transfusion-transmitted diseases Roni J. Bollag October 2005 § 610.40 Test requirements. (a) Human blood and blood components. Except as specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, you, an establishment that collects blood or blood components, must test each donation of human blood or blood component intended for use in preparing a product, (i) Syphilis testing. In addition to the including donations intended as a component testing otherwise required under this of, or used to prepare, a medical section, you must test by a serological device, for evidence of infection due to test for syphilis under §§ 640.5(a), 640.14, the following communicable disease 640.23(a), 640.33(a), 640.53(a), and agents: (1) Human immunodeficiency virus, 640.65(b)(2) of this chapter. type 1; (2) Human immunodeficiency virus, type 2; (3) Hepatitis B virus; (4) Hepatitis C virus; (5) Human T-lymphotropic virus, type I; and PROPOSED 24th edition of Standards for Blood Banks (6) Human T-lymphotropic virus, and Transfusion Services, for Comment Purposes (10/7type II. 12/7/05) Testing for transfusion-transmitted diseases • • • • • • • • • HBsAg anti-HBc anti-HCV HCV RNA anti-HIV-1/2 HIV-1 RNA anti-HTLV-I/II syphilis serology WNV RNA Historical perspective • Pre-1985: syphilis, HBsAg • 1985-1989: better HBsAg, HIV, HTLV, • • • • + ALT, anti-HBc (surrogates for nonA, nonB Hep) 1990: added HCV, HIV-2, HTLV-II 1996: HIV p24 Ag testing 1999: HIV, HCV NAT 2004: WNV NAT Hepatitis B • • • • • • • transmitted through parenteral, sexual exposure mean incubation time 90 days 50% of infections are symptomatic 1/500 infections are lethal 6 -10% of infections become chronic vaccination makes donor anti-HBs+, HBsAg-, anti-HBcrisk of transmission 1/66,000 Hepatitis C • Transmitted through parenteral (common) or sexual (rare) • • • • • • • • exposure Most common chronic blood-borne infection in US with ~150,000 new cases/year. ~ 4 million infected in US Most common transfusion-transmitted disease Most common cause of liver transplants. 75% of infections become chronic Latency of symptomatic liver disease can be decades Antibody appears in serum 54 – 192 days post-infection Risk of transmission 1/103,000 HIV • • • • • • First reports of transfusion-transmitted HIV in 1982 Blood product testing began in 1985 transmitted through parenteral, sexual exposure Variable latency period Antibody titer detectable ~ 45 days post-infection Common symptoms include night sweats, weight loss, diarrhea, thrush, purpura • Infection chronic, but viral load abated with multi-drug therapy • Risk of transmission 1/563,000 Transfusion transmission risks Transmission risk, per unit 1:100 HIV 1:1000 HBV 1:10 000 HCV 1:100 000 1:1 000 000 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 HTLV-I/II • • • • • • Transmitted through parenteral or sexual exposure HTLV-I endemic in Japan and the Caribbean Most infections generate only mild symptoms HTLV-1 causes adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (~0.1%/year) neurological disorder similar to MS (~0.1%/year) Risk of transmission 1/641,000. West Nile Virus • • • • • • • • • • transmitted by arthropod exposure (incidental) birds are primary hosts 50nm spherical, lipid-enveloped flavivirus Single-stranded positive sense RNA genome (11,000 nts) Encephalitis, meningites Asymmetric flaccid paralysis (poliomyelitis-like) 2002: 4156 cases reported in U.S. (284 fatalities) 5-10 % mortality Initial screening by questionnaire Voluntary NAT testing: through 2004, 1017 units withdrawn due to presumptive WNV infection • Peak exposure in August-September • Viremia 6.5 to 56.4 days Syphilis • • • • • • • “The great imitator” transmitted by sexual exposure rarely transmitted by transfusion (2-3 reports in 30 years) seroconversion occurs after occurs after spirochetemia untreated infection progresses through multiple stages testing is required by AABB (past 50 years) syphilis positivity considered surrogate marker for other diseases transmitted by high-risk behaviors • RPR for cardiolipin or reagin (non-specific) • Positive RPR sent for treponemal antibody testing (specific) Misperception? “Syphilis is a venereal disease that can also be acquired by exposure to infected blood.” - introduction to eMedicine article http://www.emedicine.com/MED/topic2224.htm Trends in infectious disease Cases per 100,000 Population Syphilis 160 140 120 100 Series1 80 60 40 20 0 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 YEAR 1990 2000 2010 RPR (non-treponemal) • Antigen: • 0.003% cardiolipin • 0.02% lecithin • 0.09% cholesterol • 10% choline chloride • 0.01875% charcoal • specimen not heat-inactivated • acceptable specimens: serum, plasma, cord blood • unacceptable specimen: CSF VDRL (non-treponemal) • Antigen: • 0.03% cardiolipin • 0.2% lecithin • 0.9% cholesterol • specimen heat-inactivated • acceptable specimens: serum, CSF, cord blood • unacceptable specimen: plasma FTA-ABS (treponemal) • Antigen: • suspension of Treponema pallidum (Nichols) extracted • • from rabbit testicular tissue Sorbent: • cultures of nonpathogenic Reiter treponemes Detection • FITC-labeled rabbit antihuman IgG TP-PA = MHA-TP (treponemal) • Antigen: • formalinized tanned sheep erythrocytes sensitized with • • T. pallidum (2.5% suspension) Sorbent: • 0.5% sheep red cell membranes • 0.25% bovine red cell membranes • 0.1% rabbit testicular extract • 0.125% sonicated Reiter treponeme • 1% normal rabbit serum Detection • Agglutination Sensitivities and Specificities of Syphilis serology tests Standard Status Nontreponemal Tests Sensitivity (%) by Stage of Untreated Syphilis Latent Late Specificity Test Primary Secondary VDRL 78 (74-87) 100 96 (88-100) 71 (34-94) 98 (96-99) RPR 86 (77-99) 100 98 (95-100) 98 (93-99) 73 Nonsyphilis Standard Status Treponemal Tests Sensitivity (%) by Stage of Untreated Syphilis Specificity Test Primary Secondary Latent Late Nonsyphilis FTA-ABS 84 (70-100) 100 100 96 97 (84-100) MHA-TP 76 (69-90) 100 97 (97-100) 99 (98-100) Causes of false positive non-treponemal tests Acute Chronic Hepatitis Connective tissue / autoimmune diseases Viral pneumonia Immunoglobulin abnormalities Measles Narcotic addiction Malaria Aging Pregnancy Leprosy Infectious mononucleosis Malignancy Chicken pox Other viral infections Immunizations Drug use Lab / technical error Causes of false positive treponemal tests FTA-ABS MHA-TP 1% false positives < 1% false positives Systemic, discoid, druginduced lupus Narcotic addiction Aging Other collagen vascular diseases Leprosy IV drug abuse Lyme disease Infectious mononucleosis Drug addiction Collagen vascular diseases Leprosy Other miscellaneous conditions AABB position on syphilis testing STATEMENT OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF BLOOD BANKS BEFORE THE BLOOD PRODUCTS ADVISORY COMMITTEE September 15, 2000 Syphilis Testing Presented by Louis Katz, MD Chair, AABB Transfusion Transmitted Disease Committee “AABB believes the requirement for performing an STS on each whole blood donation can safely be eliminated based on thirty years experience” AABB position on syphilis testing Rationale • transfusion-transmitted syphilis not recognized in US for 30 years • transmissibility of T. pallidum occurs before the STS is reactive • storage of blood components in refrigerators and improved oxygen tension likely to prevent transmission of spirochetes • from 1990 to 1997, 57% of 241,800 component recalls were for incorrect syphilis testing Serological vs NAT testing • Window period (based on serological testing): • HCV (80d) • HBV (56 d) • HIV (16 d) • Window period (based on NAT) • HCV (10-30 d) • HIV (10 d) http://www.moffitt.usf.edu/pubs/ccj/v6n5/dept5.htm Algorithm for multiplex NAT screening Syphilis NAT testing • Published PCR targets: • tpf-1 • BMP • tmpA, tmpB • 47-kDa protein gene • 16S RNA • polA • Sensitivity: • 200 organisms/ml • gold-standard (RIT) detects 2 organisms/ml Proposal for Treponema pallidum diagnostic PCR based on the highly conserved mutL gene • Primers: • forward: CTTGAAACGCAAATGCTCAA • reverse: CCCTCGCTTCCTAACACAAG • PCR product: 197 bp • Rationale: bacterial mutL homologs are conserved through to humans and are essential for function Serology vs NAT testing for Treponema pallidum • Window period for syphilis: 1 – 3 wks • NAT testing can identify 50 organisms (decreasing window to less than 1 week). • The rabbit infectivity test (RIT), = "gold standard" test has a detection limit of a single organism and can be used to confirm T. pallidum infection • requires access to an animal facility • extremely time-consuming and expensive • Minimum TAT 90 d Problems with NAT testing for syphilis • molecular biological expertise required • special precautions to prevent cross-contamination • commercially available NAT assays require more than 12 • hours to perform the cost of each commercial NAT test is approximately 10 times that of the most expensive EIA test. Conclusion: serological testing for syphilis in blood products Serological testing for syphilis in individual donated blood products should be eliminated or replaced with highly specific and sensitive NAT testing, to be performed in multiplex algorithm with other NAT screens Bibliography • Orton, S.L., Liu, H., Dodd, R.Y., Williams, A.E. (2002) Prevalence of circulating Treponema pallidum DNA and RNA in blood donors with confirmed-positive syphilis tests. Transfusion. 42: 94-99 • Palmer, H.M., Higgins, S.P., Herring, A.J., Kingston, M.A. (2003) Use of PCR in the diagnosis of early syphilis in the United Kingdom. Sex. Transm. Infect. 79: 479-483. • Liu, H., Rodes, B., Chen, C.-Y., Steiner, B. (2001) New tests for syphilis: rational design of a PCR method for detection of Treponema pallidum in clinical specimens using unique regions of the DNA polymerase I gene. J. Clin. Microbiol. 39:1941-1946 • Harmening, D.M. (2005) Modern Blood Banking and Transfusion Practices, 5th ed. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis and Co. • Brecher, M.E., ed. (2002) AABB Technical Manual, 14th ed. Bethesda, MD: American Association of Blood Banks. • • • • http://www.aabb.org/pressroom/press_releases/prbpacsyph091400.htm http://www.moffitt.usf.edu/pubs/ccj/v6n5/dept5.htm http://www.aabb.org/About_the_AABB/Stds_and_Accred/stdsproposedbbts24.pdf • • http://www.bloodbook.com/trans-tran.html http://www.emedicine.com/MED/topic2224.htm http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=Nucleotide&list_uids=3322571&dopt= GenBank