Transfusion-transmitted diseases: risks, prevention and perspectives

: During the past decades major improvements in blood safety have been achieved, both in developed and developing countries. The introduction of donor counseling and screening for different pathogens has made blood a very safe product, especially in developed countries. However, even in these countr...

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Published in:European journal of haematology Vol. 62; no. 1; pp. 1 - 18
Main Authors: Moor, Anne C. E., Dubbelman, Tom M. A. R., VanSteveninck, John, Brand, Anneke
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-01-1999
Blackwell
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Summary:: During the past decades major improvements in blood safety have been achieved, both in developed and developing countries. The introduction of donor counseling and screening for different pathogens has made blood a very safe product, especially in developed countries. However, even in these countries, there is still a residual risk for the transmission of several pathogens. For viruses such as the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and the hepatitis viruses B and C, this is due mainly to window‐period donations. Furthermore, the threat of newly emerging pathogens which can affect blood safety is always present. For example, the implications of the agent causing new variant Creutzfeld‐Jakob disease for transfusion practice are not yet clear. Finally, there are several pathogens, e.g. CMV and parvo B19, which are common in the general donor population, and might pose a serious threat in selected groups of immunosuppressed patients. In the future, further improvements in blood safety are expected from the introduction of polymerase chain reaction for testing and from the implementation of photochemical decontamination for cellular blood products. The situation in transfusion medicine in the developing world is much less favorable, due mainly to a higher incidence and prevalence of infectious diseases.
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ISSN:0902-4441
1600-0609
DOI:10.1111/j.1600-0609.1999.tb01108.x