Zhongguo shuxue zazhi (Dec 2023)
Confirmation of HBV infection of HBsAg-negative NAT suspicious sample from blood donors
Abstract
Objective To explore the HBV infection of initially reactive but discriminatory test non-reactive (NAT suspicious) samples of voluntary blood donors after PANTHER individual nucleic acid testing (ID-NAT) in Tianjin. Methods From January to August 2021, after routine testing and PANTHER ID-NAT, a total of 66 HBsAg-NAT reactive but discriminatory test non-reactive samples(referred to as NAT suspicious samples) were tested from 69 362 blood samples. Among which, 23 samples were selected by simple random sampling method and enriched by ultra-high speed centrifugation. HBV DNA was detected by supersensitive fluorescence quantification PCR (qPCR)and ID-NAT, and electrochemiluminescence was supplemented for two and half pairs of hepatitis B detection. Results Among 23 suspicious NAT samples, 14 were confirmed HBV DNA positive by serological and molecular biological tests, and the anti-HBc positive rate of HBV infected individuals was 92.8%. 92.8% (13/14) of the infected individuals were occult hepatitis B virus infection(OBI). A total of 10 samples were detected for viral load by qPCR, of which 5 were quantifiable, with viral load of (11~464) IU/mL and a median of 15.4 IU/mL. Conclusion 60% of the NAT suspicious samples were detected as HBV DNA positive. Anti-HBc testing can exclude most OBI undetectable by NAT, and the sensitivity of NAT should be improved to ensure the safety of blood transfusion.
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