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Characteristics of Antibody Responses in West Nile Virus-Seropositive Blood Donors
Authors:Paul J Carson  Harry E Prince  Brad J Biggerstaff  Robert Lanciotti  Leslie H Tobler  Michael Busch
Institution:aUniversity of North Dakota School of Medicine, Grand Forks, North Dakota, USA;bSanford Health, Fargo, North Dakota, USA;cFocus Diagnostics, Cypress, California, USA;dCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA;eBlood Systems Research Institute, San Francisco, California, USA
Abstract:West Nile virus (WNV) is now endemic in the United States. Protection against infection is thought to be conferred in part by humoral immunity. An understanding of the durability and specificity of the humoral response is not well established. We studied the magnitude and specificity of antibody responses in 370 WNV-seropositive blood donors. We also recalled 18 donors who were infected in 2005 to compare their antibody responses at 6 months following infection versus at 5 years postinfection. There were no significant differences in IgG antibody levels based on age, sex, or recent infection (as evidenced by IgM positivity). Specific antibody responses by viral plaque reduction neutralization testing (PRNT) were seen in 51/54 subjects evaluated. All donors who were seropositive in 2005 remained seropositive at 5 years and maintained neutralizing antibodies. IgG levels at 5 years postinfection showed fairly minimal decreases compared with the paired levels at 6 months postinfection (mean of paired differences,−0.54 signal-to-cutoff ratio (S/CO) units 95% confidence interval {CI}, −0.86 to −0.21 S/CO units]) and only minimal decreases in PRNT titers. WNV induces a significant antibody response that remains present even 5 years after infection.
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