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Transfusion-Transmitted Hepatitis E Virus Infection in France
Affiliation:1. Etablissement Français du Sang, La Plaine St Denis, France;2. Unité des virus émergents (Université Aix-Marseille, IRD 90, U 1207 Inserm), IHU Méditerranée Infection, Marseille, France;3. Centre national de référence du virus hépatite E, service de virologie, CHU Toulouse; UMR Inserm 1043 – UMR CNRS 5282, Toulouse, France;4. Service de virologie, CHU Paul Brousse, centre national de référence des hépatites à transmission entériques, AP-HP, U 1193 Inserm, Villejuif, France;5. Etablissement Français du Sang Ile de France, Créteil, France;6. Etablissement Français du Sang Nouvelle Aquitaine, Bordeaux, France;7. Département de néphrologie et de transplantation d’organe, CHU Rangueil ; UMR1043, Inserm Centre de Physiopathologie de Toulouse Purpan; Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France;8. Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité; Institut Pasteur, Inserm 1223; Service d’hépatologie, AP-HP, Cochin Port-Royal, Paris, France;9. UMR 1098 Inserm, Etablissement Français du Sang, Université de Franche-Comté, Besançon, France;1. Héma-Québec, Montréal, Québec, Canada;2. Canadian Blood Services, Toronto and Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;3. Sanquin Blood Services, Department of Blood-borne Infections, Donor Medicine Research, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;4. Vitalant Research Institute, San Francisco, CA;5. American Red Cross, Scientific Affairs, Gaithersburg, MD
Abstract:There is growing concern regarding the risk of transfusion- transmitted (TT) hepatitis E. Since the first described case in 2006, several TT hepatitis E have been reported to the French hemovigilance network. We performed a retrospective analysis of all cases of TT hepatitis E reported between 2006 and 2016. Transfusion-transmitted hepatitis E with high imputability according to phylogenetic analysis occurred in 23 patients aged 8 to 88 years and involved mostly solid organ recipients (n = 9) or patients with malignant hematological diseases (n = 9, including 4 hematopoietic allograft recipients). Involved blood products were plasma (n = 7), among which 6 had undergone pathogen reduction with solvent/detergent (n = 4) or amotosalen + ultra-violet A (UVA) (n = 2 from 1 donation) treatments, red blood concentrates (n = 7), apheresis platelets concentrates (n = 3) and whole blood pooled platelets concentrates (n = 6), among which one had underwent amotosalen + UVA treatment. Median hepatitis E virus (HEV) RNA dose infused was 5.79 [4.36–10.10] log IU. HEV infection progressed to chronic hepatitis E in 14 (61%) immunocompromised patients, 2 of whom had advanced liver fibrosis at diagnosis. Chronic hepatitis E patients cleared HEV with ribavirin treatment (n = 10), after immunosuppressive drug reduction (n = 3), or spontaneously (n = 1). One additional organ transplant recipient with associated co-morbidities died with ongoing HEV infection and multiple organ failure. The other 8 (34.8%) patients with TT hepatitis E cleared HEV within 6 months with ribavirin treatment (n = 3), reduced immunosuppression (n = 1) or spontaneously (n = 4). Red cells, platelets, and plasma transfusions may be associated with TT hepatitis E that can evolve to chronic hepatitis E in immunocompromised patients. Hepatitis E virus has emerged in France as a clinically significant TT infection risk.
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