• Transfusion · Dec 2006

    Sensitivity of hepatitis B virus DNA transcription-mediated amplification testing in hepatitis B surface antigen-positive blood donations.

    • Françoise Bouchardeau, Annie Girault, Annie Razer, Annabelle Servant-Delmas, Mélanie Mercier, and Syria Laperche.
    • Expertise unit of Virology, National Reference Center for Hepatitis B and C Viruses in Transfusion, National Institute of Blood Transfusion, Paris, France.
    • Transfusion. 2006 Dec 1; 46 (12): 2047-52.

    BackgroundThe objective was to evaluate the performance of nucleic acid testing (NAT) in the detection of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive blood donations.Study Design And MethodsA total of 253 HBsAg- and anti-hepatitis B core antigen (HBc)-positive samples (50 hepatitis B e antigen [HBeAg]-positive and 203 anti-HBe-positive) from blood donations collected in France were studied. The samples were investigated with a blood screening assay (Procleix Ultrio, Chiron/Gen-Probe) in minipool (MP; x8) and in individual-donation (ID) testing. All nonreactive samples were retested once, and nonreactive MP samples were assayed for viral load (VL).ResultsAll 50 HBeAg-positive samples were reactive in MP-NAT and ID-NAT. Of the 203 anti-HBe-positive donations, 80.3 percent were MP- and ID-reactive, 17.2 percent were MP-nonreactive and ID-reactive, and 2.5 percent were nonreactive in ID-NAT. Overall the sensitivity of ID-NAT was 98 percent versus 84 percent for MP-NAT. After retesting, 16 of the 35 MP-nonreactive and/or ID-reactive donations became MP-reactive and 2 of the ID-nonreactive donations became NAT-reactive. The capacity of Procleix Ultrio to detect HBV DNA was not related to HBsAg subtype, but correlated with the VL: the mean VL in the group of MP-nonreactive samples was 1,420 copies per mL vs. 17,000 copies per mL in the group of 40 MP-reactive samples.ConclusionThese results demonstrate that HBV-NAT in ID format is far more effective in detecting viremia in chronic HBsAg carriers than in MP-NAT. The sensitivity of the NAT assay needs to be improved to be considered for replacing the current HBsAg assays, especially when anti-HBc testing is not performed.

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