Article citationsMore>>
Bawa, M.K., Mamman, A., Olayinka, A., Gidado, S., Waziri, N.E., Balogun, M.S., Getso, K.I., Dalhat, M.M., Nsubuga, P., Aliyu, N., Bala, H., Muhammad, H., Haladu, S., Shehu, U.L. and Nguku, P.M. (2019) Blood Donor Safety, Prevalence and Associated Factors for Cytomegalovirus Infection among Blood Donors in Minna-Nigeria, 2014. The Pan African Medical Journal, 32, 1-6.
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.supp.2019.32.1.13297
has been cited by the following article:
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TITLE:
Screening Donated Blood for Transfusion-Transmissible Cytomegalovirus Infection among Libyans
AUTHORS:
Farag Bleiblo, Abdelhakim Eljaki, Mohamed Bumadian, Khaled Elwaheishi, Eman Almismary, Mabroka Aljlale, Rabea Alghazal, Mohammed Abraheem
KEYWORDS:
Cytomegalovirus, Seroprevalence, Blood Transfusion, Transfusion-Transmissible Cytomegalovirus, Enzyme Immunoassays
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Biosciences and Medicines,
Vol.8 No.1,
December
24,
2019
ABSTRACT: Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a ubiquitous DNA-containing herpesvirus causes severe and fatal diseases in immunocompromised patients and a prevalent cause of virus-associated birth defects. Blood transfusion donated for neonates, pregnant women, and immunocom-promised patients should be adequately screened for evidences of CMV infection prior to use in clinical management. The effective national programmes for quality-assured screening of donated blood have not yet been fully established, hence this study was undertaken to assess whether any bloodborne-CMV infections pose a significant threat to the safety of the blood supplies. A total of 200 voluntary blood donor subjects admitted to the Blood Bank of Benghazi/Libya were screened for transfusion-transmissible CMV (TT-CMV) using a highly sensitive CMV total IgG and IgM antibody enzyme immunoassay as well as CMV pp65 anti-genemia assays. We determined that the overall seropositivity for IgG antibodies (80.50%) was higher than that of IgM antibodies (39.00%), but only 2 (1.00%) individuals out of these donors were seropositive for the CMV-antigenic protein pp65. The frequency of CMV infection based on gender was incomparable due to the small population number of blood-donated females. According to age, there was not influence of various age groups on prevalence of anti-CMV IgG antibodies, while a progressive increase in seropositivity of CMV-IgM antibodies with age was detected. The age groups were not significantly associated with CMV prevalence. In contrast, only 2 (1.00%) patients were shown to be positive for all three performed assays indicating a recurrent infection. Our findings prove a risk of primary transfusion-associated transmission of CMV and may provide a policy guidance on ensuring safe blood supplies accessible to all patients who require transfusion.
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