Indigenous hepatitis E virus infection of a plasma donor in Germany
- PMID: 19555366
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2009.01211.x
Indigenous hepatitis E virus infection of a plasma donor in Germany
Abstract
Background: Although Europe is supposed to be non-endemic for hepatitis E virus (HEV), locally acquired human cases are registered, and a relatively high prevalence for anti-HEV was found in blood donors in some European countries. Transfusion-transmitted infections by contaminated blood products were reported in Japan and sporadically in Europe.
Materials and methods: Several samples from a plasma donor were screened with a highly sensitive quantitative HEV real-time polymerase chain reaction and the full-length genome was generated. Serology was performed with two different commercially available ELISA kits.
Results: The full-length genome sequence of human HEV was identified using samples from a plasma donor with acute self-limiting hepatitis. Plasma donated 2 weeks before onset of elevated liver enzyme levels was already positive for HEV RNA (10(4) copies/ml). High viraemia (10(6) copies/ml) correlated with the detection of anti-HEV IgM in the first blood sample with increased alanine transaminase levels. Phylogenetic analyses grouped the isolate within genotype 3, subtype 3f.
Conclusion: The sequence analyses and the epidemiological data revealed that the plasma donor was most probably infected with a swine HEV. This case supports the ongoing discussion of an obligatory HEV nucleic acid testing of blood products for special recipient risk groups.
Comment in
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Hepatitis E virus and blood donors in Germany.Vox Sang. 2010 Apr;98(3 Pt 2):479. doi: 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2009.01258.x. Epub 2010 Feb 2. Vox Sang. 2010. PMID: 20136793 No abstract available.
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