Epidemiologic background and long-term course of disease in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected blood donors identified before routine laboratory screening. Transfusion Safety Study Group.

Pubmed ID: 7940656

Journal: Transfusion

Publication Date: Oct. 1, 1994

Affiliation: Irwin Memorial Blood Center, University of California, San Francisco.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Adult, Female, HIV-1, Risk Factors, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Adolescent, Blood Donors, Child, HIV Seropositivity

Grants: N01-HB-97074, N01-HB-4-7002, N01-HB-4-7003

Authors: Busch MP, Operskalski EA, Mosley JW, Kleinman SH, Stevens CE, Schiff ER, Lee H, Lee M, Harris M

Cite As: Busch MP, Operskalski EA, Mosley JW, Stevens CE, Schiff ER, Kleinman SH, Lee H, Lee M, Harris M. Epidemiologic background and long-term course of disease in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected blood donors identified before routine laboratory screening. Transfusion Safety Study Group. Transfusion 1994 Oct;34(10):858-64.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The long-term course of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-related disease among seropositive blood donors has not been described. The enrollment and epidemiologic background of HIV-1-infected donors in the Transfusion Safety Study and their immunologic and clinical progression are described. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Through the testing of approximately 200,000 sera from donations made in late 1984 and early 1985, 146 anti-HIV-1-positive donors and 151 uninfected matched donors were enrolled. These two cohorts were followed with 6-month interval histories and laboratory testing. RESULTS: Seropositive donors detected before the institution of routine anti-HIV-1 screening disproportionately were first-time donors and men with exclusively male sexual contacts. The actuarial probability of a person's developing AIDS within 7 years after donation was 40 percent; the probability of a person's dying of AIDS was 28 percent. AIDS developed more often when the donor was p24 antigen-positive at donation. Over a 3-year period, significant decreases occurred in CD4+, CD2+CD26+, CD4+CD29+, and CD20+CD21+ counts, but not in CD8+ subsets, CD20+, or CD14+. CONCLUSION: The high proportions of first-time donations and exclusively homosexual men among seropositive donors suggest that test-seeking may have contributed to the high HIV-1 prevalence in the repository. Implementation of alternative test sites when routine donor screening began in 1985 may have averted many high-risk donations. The disease course in HIV-1-infected donors had the same wide spectrum of immunologic and clinical manifestations as were reported for other cohorts.