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. 2010 Aug 19:7:193.
doi: 10.1186/1743-422X-7-193.

Detection of hepatitis B virus DNA among accepted blood donors in Nanjing, China

Affiliations

Detection of hepatitis B virus DNA among accepted blood donors in Nanjing, China

Yong Liu et al. Virol J. .

Abstract

Background: Posttransfusion hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection still occurs although its incidence has been substantially reduced since the introduction of screening of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) in blood donors. This study aimed to investigate the occult HBV infection in accepted blood donors in Nanjing, China.

Results: The lower detection limit of the nested PCR in this study was estimated to be 20 copies/ml HBV DNA. The positive rate of occult HBV infection was 0.13% (5 of 2972) in the accepted blood donors. Sequencing data showed that the amplified HBV sequences were not identical each other and to the known sequences cloned in our laboratory, excluding the false-positive caused by cross-contamination. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the HBV in all five donors was genotype B; a single base deletion was detected in the S region of HBV DNA from one donor, and no mutation was observed in the "a" determinant of HBsAg from four other donors. All five donors were negative for anti-HBs and one was positive for anti-HBc.

Conclusions: The prevalence of occult HBV infection in the accepted blood donors in Nanjing, China is relatively high. The data would be meaningful in adapting strategy to eliminate posttransfusion HBV infection in China.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The lower detection limit of the nested PCR. Lanes 1-4, HBV positive control with 2000, 200, 20, and 2 copies/ml respectively.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Phylogenetic analysis of S region of HBV. Phylogenetic tree of the partial S gene sequences (185 bp) from five donors with occult HBV infection in this study and sequences recovered from GenBank. Sequences retrieved from GenBank are denoted by their accession numbers and genotype. *, S gene sequences obtained in this study.

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