Virological safety of the UK blood supply in the era of individual risk assessments and HIV PrEP.
Victoria MaddoxPamela VallelySusan R BrailsfordHeli HarvalaPublished in: Transfusion medicine (Oxford, England) (2023)
A more individualised donor selection policy was implemented in the UK in 2021, which replaced the previous 3-month deferral for men who have sex with men (MSM). Other blood services have a variety of policies in place to ensure the virological safety of blood components, ranging from an indefinite ban on MSM, to a defined period of exclusion, or to an individualised risk assessment that is not based on gender or sexual orientation. Justification of these policies should be based on scientific evidence including assessment of lengths of virological window periods, infectious disease epidemiology within donor populations and donation screening assay sensitivities. Developments in molecular technology and assays which can detect both antibodies and antigens in the very early stages of infection have significantly reduced the risk in most developed countries. However, the increasing usage of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent acquisition of HIV infection after possible high-risk sexual contact within the UK blood donor population has been recently noted. It has brought with it new diagnostic challenges within blood screening, notably possible non-detection of HIV RNA and serological markers following PrEP use despite potential infectivity. The use of other testing strategies such as detection of HIV DNA and screening for non-declared PrEP usage should be investigated further.
Keyphrases
- men who have sex with men
- hiv testing
- hiv positive
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected
- public health
- mental health
- risk assessment
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected patients
- hiv aids
- healthcare
- cross sectional
- infectious diseases
- south africa
- label free
- real time pcr
- heavy metals
- single molecule
- genetic diversity
- nucleic acid