EClinicalMedicine (Mar 2025)

Occult hepatitis B virus infection: risk for a blood supply, but how about individuals’ health?

  • Michael X. Fu,
  • Ahmed Elsharkawy,
  • Brendan Healy,
  • Celia Jackson,
  • Daniel Bradshaw,
  • Emma Watkins,
  • Ines Ushiro-Lumb,
  • Jaisi Griffiths,
  • James Neuberger,
  • Kathryn Maguire,
  • Monica Desai,
  • Neil McDougall,
  • Nicole Priddee,
  • Stephen T. Barclay,
  • Stuart Blackmore,
  • Peter Simmonds,
  • William L. Irving,
  • Heli Harvala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2025.103095
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 81
p. 103095

Abstract

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Summary: The implementation of effective blood donation screening for hepatitis B virus (HBV) anti-core antibodies with highly sensitive molecular HBV DNA detection in low-endemic countries like the United Kingdom has improved blood safety. However, the linkage to care and management for blood donors with occult HBV infection (OBI) is a complex dilemma involving virological, clinical, methodological, and social issues. Limited evidence suggests that OBI may accelerate the progression of liver disease and cancer. The need for a specialist referral for donors identified with OBI carries mixed opinions from blood establishments, hepatologists, and public health. Following extensive multidisciplinary discussions, experts agree upon a need for clear messaging for donors and to consider the oncogenic implications of OBI. Proposals for future studies are identified, and the applicability of the recommendations in low-resource, high-endemic regions is considered, as well as the inclusion of OBI in global hepatitis elimination targets.

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