Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2016)

High Incidence of Chikungunya Virus and Frequency of Viremic Blood Donations during Epidemic, Puerto Rico, USA, 2014

  • Graham Simmons,
  • Vanessa Brès,
  • Kai Lu,
  • Nathan M. Liss,
  • Donald J. Brambilla,
  • Kyle R. Ryff,
  • Roberta Bruhn,
  • Edwin Velez,
  • Derrek Ocampo,
  • Jeffrey M. Linnen,
  • Gerardo Latoni,
  • Lyle R. Petersen,
  • Phillip Williamson,
  • Edward L. Murphy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2207.160116
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 7
pp. 1221 – 1228

Abstract

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Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) caused large epidemics throughout the Caribbean in 2014. We conducted nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT) for CHIKV RNA (n = 29,695) and serologic testing for IgG against CHIKV (n = 1,232) in archived blood donor samples collected during and after an epidemic in Puerto Rico in 2014. NAAT yields peaked in October with 2.1% of donations positive for CHIKV RNA. A total of 14% of NAAT-reactive donations posed a high risk for virus transmission by transfusion because of high virus RNA copy numbers (104–109 RNA copies/mL) and a lack of specific IgM and IgG responses. Testing of minipools of 16 donations would not have detected 62.5% of RNA-positive donations detectable by individual donor testing, including individual donations without IgM and IgG. Serosurveys before and after the epidemic demonstrated that nearly 25% of blood donors in Puerto Rico acquired CHIKV infections and seroconverted during the epidemic.

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