Viral Hepatitis B and C Markers in the Population of Deceased Donors in Poland

Autor: Anna Pszenny, D. Gutowska, A. Kwiatkowski, Jarosław Czerwiński, Piotr Małkowski, Andrzej Chmura, A. Pacholczyk, J. Wałaszewski, Dariusz Wasiak, P. Malanowski
Rok vydání: 2007
Předmět:
Zdroj: Transplantation Proceedings. 39:2695-2697
ISSN: 0041-1345
Popis: In the years 2001 to 2005 in Poland, 3146 potential deceased donors were referred with 2583 (82%) organs procured and 57 (2%) donors not used due to positive viral markers. According to Polish rules, in every case of possible organ harvest from a deceased donor we test viral markers of anti-HIV I/II, HBsAg, and anti-HCV. Organs from HBsAg-positive donors (the rule accepted in Poland a few years ago) are not transplanted; kidneys from anti-HCV(+) donors are transplanted into matched recipients. According to donor hospital capabilities, other viral tests are performed: anti-HBs, anti-HBc, HBeAg, and anti-HBe. We calculate the frequency of positive serological tests for viral markers among the population of deceased donors, for HBsAg it was 1.1% (from these donors 10 kidneys and 1 liver were transplanted); and for anti-HCV it was 2.6% (from these donors 78 kidneys were used). Anti-HBc-positive deceased donors, particularly liver donors (due to the high risk of viral transmission and de novo infection), are a major problem in transplantation, which reduced the number of used organs. Only 17 of 86 (20%) of the HBc-positive donors became liver donors compared with 257 of 524 (49%) donors from the HBc-negative group. But anti-HBc was checked only in 24% of potential donors (positive in 16.6% of cases), which means that 506 of 780 transplanted livers (65%) were obtained from donors of unknown anti-HBc status, 257 (33%) from anti-HBc-negative subjects and 17 (2%) from anti-HBc-positive subjects.
Databáze: OpenAIRE