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[Post-transfusional Hepatitis in the City of Campinas, SP, Brazil. II. Presence of Anti-HBc and Anti-HCV Antibodies in Blood Donor Candidates and Occurrence of Post-transfusional Hepatitis C in Recipients of Blood or Derivates]

Overview
Specialty Tropical Medicine
Date 1993 Jan 1
PMID 7506447
Citations 2
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Abstract

We have analysed anti-HBc and anti-HCV antibodies in serum samples from 799 donors which had their blood or derivates transfused to 111 recipients. Anti-HBc and anti-HCV were reactive in respectively 9 and 2.1% of the donors tested. We have observed that among the 111 recipients, 44 had received at least one positive anti-HBc unit and 67 had been transfused only with negative anti-HBc, units. The risk of developing hepatitis C virus was 4.5 times higher for the recipients who received at least one positive anti-HBc unit. If the test for anti-HBc had been made for the blood donors in the serological screening, about 56% of the HCV cases in the recipients could have been avoided. The population of recipients who received at least one reacting unit of anti-HCV, presented a risk 29 times higher of developing this hepatitis, as compared to the transfused recipients with all anti-HCV negative units. Testing blood from donors for anti-HCV would avoid 79% of the post-transfusional HCV cases. Brazilian candidates to blood donors seem to be carriers either simultaneously or sequentially to hepatitis virus B and C, since 44.4% of the positive anti-HCV were also positive for anti-HBc. Testing for anti-HBc and anti-HCV in blood screening must be indicated in order to prevent post-transfusional hepatitis transmission in our community.

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Hepatitis E virus immunoglobulin G antibodies in different populations in Campinas, Brazil.

Goncales N, Pinho J, Moreira R, Saraceni C, Spina A, Stucchi R Clin Diagn Lab Immunol. 2000; 7(5):813-6.

PMID: 10973460 PMC: 95961. DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.7.5.813-816.2000.


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Tillmann H, Manns M Dig Dis Sci. 1996; 41(12 Suppl):27S-40S.

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