PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

A Bayesian meta-analysis on prevalence of hepatitis B virus infection among Chinese volunteer blood donors.

  • Guang-cong Liu,
  • Guo-yuan Sui,
  • Guang-ying Liu,
  • Yang Zheng,
  • Yan Deng,
  • Yan-yan Gao,
  • Lie Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079203
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e79203

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Although transfusion-transmitted infection of hepatitis B virus (HBV) threatens the blood safety of China, the nationwide circumstance of HBV infection among blood donors is still unclear. OBJECTIVES: To comprehensively estimate the prevalence of HBsAg positive and HBV occult infection (OBI) among Chinese volunteer blood donors through bayesian meta-analysis. METHODS: We performed an electronic search in Pub-Med, Web of Knowledge, Medline, Wanfang Data and CNKI, complemented by a hand search of relevant reference lists. Two authors independently extracted data from the eligible studies. Then two bayesian random-effect meta-analyses were performed, followed by bayesian meta-regressions. RESULTS: 5957412 and 571227 donors were identified in HBsAg group and OBI group, respectively. The pooled prevalence of HBsAg group and OBI group among donors is 1.085% (95% credible interval [CI] 0.859%~1.398%) and 0.094% (95% CI 0.0578%~0.1655%). For HBsAg group, subgroup analysis shows the more developed area has a lower prevalence than the less developed area; meta-regression indicates there is a significant decreasing trend in HBsAg positive prevalence with sampling year (beta = -0.1202, 95% -0.2081~-0.0312). CONCLUSION: Blood safety against HBV infection in China is suffering serious threats and the government should take effective measures to improve this situation.