Leveraging Donor Populations to Study the Epidemiology and Pathogenesis of Transfusion-Transmitted and Emerging Infectious Diseases

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q2 HEMATOLOGY
Evan M. Bloch , Michael P. Busch , Laurence M. Corash , Roger Dodd , Benyam Hailu , Steve Kleinman , Sheila O'Brien , Lyle Petersen , Susan L. Stramer , Louis Katz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The tragedy of transfusion-associated hepatitis and HIV spurred a decades-long overhaul of the regulatory oversight and practice of blood transfusion. Consequent to improved donor selection, testing, process control, clinical transfusion practice and post-transfusion surveillance, transfusion in the United States and other high-income countries is now a very safe medical procedure. Nonetheless, pathogens continue to emerge and threaten the blood supply, highlighting the need for a proactive approach to blood transfusion safety. Blood donor populations and the global transfusion infrastructure are under-utilized resources for the study of infectious diseases. Blood donors are large, demographically diverse subsets of general populations for whom cross-sectional and longitudinal samples are readily accessible for serological and molecular testing. Blood donor collection networks span diverse geographies, including in low- and middle-income countries, where agents, especially zoonotic pathogens, are able to emerge and spread, given limited tools for recognition, surveillance and control. Routine laboratory storage and transportation, coupled with data capture, afford access to rich epidemiological data to assess the epidemiology and pathogenesis of established and emerging infections. Subsequent to the State of the Science in Transfusion Medicine symposium in 2022, our working group (WG), “Emerging Infections: Impact on Blood Science, the Blood Supply, Blood Safety, and Public Health” elected to focus on “leveraging donor populations to study the epidemiology and pathogenesis of transfusion-transmitted and emerging infectious diseases.” The 5 landmark studies span (1) the implication of hepatitis C virus in post-transfusion hepatitis, (2) longitudinal evaluation of plasma donors with incident infections, thus informing the development of a widely used staging system for acute HIV infection, (3) explication of the dynamics of early West Nile Virus infection, (4) the deployment of combined molecular and serological donor screening for Babesia microti, to characterize its epidemiology and infectivity and facilitate routine donor screening, and (5) national serosurveillance for SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The studies highlight the interplay between infectious diseases and transfusion medicine, including the imperative to ensure blood transfusion safety and the broader application of blood donor populations to the study of infectious diseases.

利用供体群体研究输血传播和新发传染病的流行病学和发病机制。
输血相关肝炎和艾滋病毒的悲剧促使对输血监管和实践进行了长达数十年的彻底改革。由于改进了捐献者的选择、检测、过程控制、临床输血实践和输血后监测,在美国和其他高收入国家,输血现在是一种非常安全的医疗程序。尽管如此,病原体仍在不断出现,并威胁着血液供应,这突出了对输血安全采取积极措施的必要性。献血人群和全球输血基础设施在传染病研究方面的资源利用不足。献血者是人口统计学上多样化的普通人群的大型亚群,其横断面和纵向样本很容易用于血清学和分子检测。献血者收集网络横跨不同的地区,包括中低收入国家,在这些国家,由于识别、监测和控制工具有限,病原体,特别是人畜共患病原体,能够出现和传播。常规的实验室储存和运输,再加上数据采集,可以获得丰富的流行病学数据,以评估现有和新发感染的流行病学和发病机制。在2022年的输血医学科学状况研讨会之后,我们的工作组(WG)“新发感染:对血液科学、血液供应、血液安全和公共卫生的影响”选择专注于“利用献血人群研究输血传播和新发传染病的流行病学和发病机制”。“这5项具有里程碑意义的研究涵盖了(1)丙型肝炎病毒在输血后肝炎中的影响,(2)对有偶发感染的血浆捐献者的纵向评估,从而为开发广泛使用的急性HIV感染分期系统提供了信息,(3)阐明了早期西尼罗河病毒感染的动力学,(4)部署微小巴贝菌的分子和血清学联合供体筛查,以确定其流行病学和传染性,并促进常规供体筛查,以及(5)新冠肺炎大流行期间全国SARS-CoV-2血清监测。这些研究强调了传染病和输血医学之间的相互作用,包括确保输血安全的必要性,以及献血人群在传染病研究中的更广泛应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Transfusion Medicine Reviews
Transfusion Medicine Reviews 医学-血液学
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
21 days
期刊介绍: Transfusion Medicine Reviews provides an international forum in English for the publication of scholarly work devoted to the various sub-disciplines that comprise Transfusion Medicine including hemostasis and thrombosis and cellular therapies. The scope of the journal encompasses basic science, practical aspects, laboratory developments, clinical indications, and adverse effects.
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