Fulminant Transfusion-Associated Hepatitis E Virus Infection Despite Screening, England, 2016-2020.




AuthorsHarvala H, Reynolds C, Brailsford S, Davison K

Publication year2022

JournalEmerging Infectious Diseases

Journal name in sourceEmerging infectious diseases

Journal acronymEmerg Infect Dis

Volume28

Issue9

First page 1805

Last page1813

ISSN1080-6040

eISSN1080-6059

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3201/eid2809.220487


Abstract
In England, all blood donations are screened in pools of 24 by nucleic acid test (NAT) for hepatitis E virus (HEV) RNA. During 2016-2020, this screening successfully identified and intercepted 1,727 RNA-positive donations. However, review of previous donations from infected platelet donors identified 9 donations in which HEV RNA detection was missed, of which 2 resulted in confirmed transmission: 1 infection resolved with ribavirin treatment, and 1 proceeded to fatal multiorgan failure within a month from infection. Residual risk calculations predict that over the 5-year study period, HEV RNA detection was missed by minipool NAT in 12-23 platelet and 177-354 whole-blood donations, but transmission risk remains undetermined. Although screening has been able to largely eliminate infectious HEV from the blood supply in England, missed detection of low levels of HEV RNA in donated blood can lead to a severe, even fulminant, infection in recipients and could be prevented by more sensitive screening.



Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:14