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首页> 外文期刊>Emerging Infectious Diseases >Hepatitis E Virus and Implications for Blood Supply Safety, Australia (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/14-0412)
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Hepatitis E Virus and Implications for Blood Supply Safety, Australia (http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/14-0412)

机译:澳大利亚戊型肝炎病毒及其对血液供应安全的影响(http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/20/11/14-0412)

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摘要

To the Editor: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is an emerging public health concern for industrialized countries (1). Although HEV infection has been associated with travel to countries where the virus is endemic, cases of autochthonous HEV are increasing (2). Detection of HEV RNA in blood donations in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, and China and accumulating reports of HEV transmitted through blood transfusion highlight the potential risk this virus poses to blood supply safety (1–4). In Australia, where most HEV infections are associated with travel (5), an average of 25 HEV cases occurred each year during 1999–2013 (http://www9.health.gov.au/cda/ source/rpt_3.cfm). HEV infection is nationally notifiable in Australia, but the presence of subclinical infections and the lack of recent seroprevalence studies have prevented the accurate estimation of HEV incidence and population exposure. Thus, we examined HEV seroprevalence in a cohort of Australian blood donors, assessed risk factors for exposure, and used the data to examine the effectiveness of current blood safety strategies for the management of HEV in Australia. Plasma samples (n = 3,237) were collected from donors during August– September 2013. Information on age, sex, state of residence, new/repeat donor status, and overseas travel disclosure was obtained. Details of any relevant blood donation deferral (malaria, diarrhea) applied on previous donation attempts were also collected. Application of a specific malaria deferral code is routine for donors disclosing travel to a malaria-endemic country, and a diarrhea deferral applies when a donor reports having had diarrhea (of viral or unknown cause) 1 week before any attempted donation.
机译:致编者:戊型肝炎病毒(HEV)对于工业化国家来说是一个新兴的公共卫生问题(1)。尽管戊型肝炎病毒的感染与前往该病毒流行国家的旅行有关,但本地性戊型肝炎病毒的病例却在增加(2)。在英国,德国,荷兰,日本和中国的献血中检测到戊型肝炎病毒RNA并积累了通过输血传播的戊型肝炎病毒报告,突出表明了该病毒对血液供应安全的潜在风险(1-4)。在澳大利亚,大多数HEV感染与旅行有关(5),在1999–2013年期间,每年平均发生25例HEV病例(http://www9.health.gov.au/cda/source/rpt_3.cfm)。在澳大利亚全国范围内应报告戊型肝炎病毒的感染,但是亚临床感染的存在以及近期血清阳性率研究的缺乏阻碍了对戊型肝炎病毒发生率和人群暴露的准确估计。因此,我们在一组澳大利亚献血者中检查了戊型肝炎的血清阳性率,评估了暴露的危险因素,并使用这些数据检查了当前血液安全策略在澳大利亚管理戊型肝炎的有效性。在2013年8月至9月期间,从捐赠者那里收集了血浆样本(n = 3,237)。获得了有关年龄,性别,居住状态,新/重复捐赠者身份以及出国旅行信息的信息。还收集了以前尝试的任何相关献血延期(疟疾,腹泻)的详细信息。披露疟疾流行国家的捐助者通常会使用特定的疟疾推迟代码,而当捐助者在任何尝试的捐献前1周报告腹泻(病毒性或未知原因)时,则应推迟腹泻。

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