Risk for Hepatitis E Virus Transmission by Solvent/Detergent-Treated Plasma.

Risk for Hepatitis E Virus Transmission by Solvent/Detergent-Treated Plasma. Emerg Infect Dis. 2020 Dec;26(12):2881-2886 Authors: Gallian P, Lhomme S, Morel P, Gross S, Mantovani C, Hauser L, Tinard X, Pouchol E, Djoudi R, Assal A, Abravanel F, Izopet J, Tiberghien P Abstract Hepatitis E has emerged as a major transfusion-transmitted infectious risk. Two recipients of plasma from 2 lots (A and B) of pooled solvent/detergent-treated plasma were found to be infected by hepatitis E virus (HEV) that was determined to have been transmitted by the solvent/detergent-treated plasma. HEV RNA viral loads were 433 IU in lot A and 55 IU in lot B. Retrospective studies found that 100% (13/13) of evaluable lot A recipients versus 18% (3/17) of evaluable lot B recipients had been infected by HEV (p<0.001), albeit not necessarily at time of transfusion. Among evaluable recipients, 86% with a transfused HEV RNA load >50,000 IU were infected, most likely by the HEV-containing solvent/detergent-treated plasma, versus only 7% with a transfused HEV RNA load <50,000 IU (p<0.001). Overall, solvent/detergent-treated plasma might harbor HEV. Such an occurrence might result in a dose-dependent risk for transfusion-transmitted hepatitis E. PMID: 33219652 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Emerging Infectious Diseases - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Tags: Emerg Infect Dis Source Type: research