The incidence of HEV infection in the Netherlands is high and increased during the study period. In 2013 and 2014, HEV RNA was detected in 1 per 762 donations intended for production of S/D plasma.
The AmpliPrep instrument combined with the AmpliScreen assays for HBV, HCV and HIV-1 is robust and suitable for NAT donor screening. The sensitivity criteria for HIV-1 and HCV as defined by the Paul Ehrlich Institute and the Food and Drug Administration for minipool NAT screening are met by this system. SINGLE SENTENCE SUMMARY: Generic COBAS AmpliPrep nucleic acid extraction in conjunction with COBAS AmpliScreen detection for HBV, HCV and HIV-1.
The dual-target B19V polymerase chain reaction (PCR) showed good accuracy (<0.1 log IU/mL) at the crucial concentration of 10 IU/µL for the NS1 and the VP2 region of the B19V genome and detected all known genotypes with similar sensitivity for each genotype. In addition, the dual target format reduces the chance that molecular variants of B19V are wrongly quantified. The HAV RNA assay showed high sensitivity for Genotypes I to III. Both new PCR assays have been successfully introduced for plasma screening in test pools of 480 or 96 donations.
Routine HIV and HCV NAT minipool screening using the NucliSens Extractor, AmpliScreen HIV-1 version 1.5, and AmpliScreen HCV version 2.0 meets the sensitivity criteria set by the regulatory bodies and provides sufficient specificity and robustness for timely release of blood donations.
No evidence of the presence of WNV RNA in Dutch blood donor samples from 2004 was found. However, surveillance of this emerging infection is of importance to safeguard the blood supply in the future because the transmission cycle of WNV is complex and hard to predict.
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