Low incidence of HTLV infections in random blood donors with indeterminate western blot patterns |
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Authors: | S Kwok, JJ Lipka, N McKinney, DE Kellogg, B Poiesz, SK Foung, JJ Sninsky |
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Affiliation: | Department of Infectious Diseases, Cetus Corporation, Emeryville, California. |
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Abstract: | Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were recovered from platelet units of 61 blood donors who were HTLV-I positive and 3 blood donors who were HTLV-I negative on enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Western blot analyses were performed on the sera and DNA was prepared from the PBMCs and analyzed by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Of the 61 repeatably reactive samples, 2 were positive, 26 were negative, and 33 were interpreted as indeterminate on Western blot. HTLV-II sequences were detected by PCR in one of the Western blot-positive samples, as well as in one Western blot-indeterminate sample that showed reactivity to p24 only. HTLV-I sequences were detected in the second Western blot-positive sample. HTLV sequences were not detected in the remaining samples, which suggested that the majority of individuals with indeterminate results on Western blots that used one set of commercially available reagents are not infected with HTLV. It is demonstrated in this study that PCR can be used not only to resolve the infection status of individuals with indeterminate Western blots but also to distinguish between HTLV-I and HTLV-II. |
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