Kidney transplantation from anti-HBc+ donors: results from a retrospective Italian study

The risk of transmitting a hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection from donor kidneys with a past HBV serological profile may be negligible. Data on HBV transmission to kidney transplant recipients from donor organs that were anti-HBc/HBsAg in Italy has not been previously reported. Anti-HBc testing in ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation 2006-01, Vol.81 (1), p.76-80
Hauptverfasser: De Feo, Tullia M, Grossi, Paolo, Poli, Francesca, Mozzi, Fulvio, Messa, Piergiorgio, Minetti, Enrico, Sandrini, Silvio, Boschiero, Luigi, Rigotti, Paolo, Maresca, Cristina, Rolla, Davide, Chiaramonte, Stefano, Gotti, Eliana, Caldara, Rossana, Briano, Giulio, Scalamogna, Mario
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container_end_page 80
container_issue 1
container_start_page 76
container_title Transplantation
container_volume 81
creator De Feo, Tullia M
Grossi, Paolo
Poli, Francesca
Mozzi, Fulvio
Messa, Piergiorgio
Minetti, Enrico
Sandrini, Silvio
Boschiero, Luigi
Rigotti, Paolo
Maresca, Cristina
Rolla, Davide
Chiaramonte, Stefano
Gotti, Eliana
Caldara, Rossana
Briano, Giulio
Scalamogna, Mario
description The risk of transmitting a hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection from donor kidneys with a past HBV serological profile may be negligible. Data on HBV transmission to kidney transplant recipients from donor organs that were anti-HBc/HBsAg in Italy has not been previously reported. Anti-HBc testing in cadaver organ donors has been mandatory in Italy since 2002, when anti-HBc determinations were included in the National Guidelines for donor evaluation. Therefore, prior to that date kidney recipients from anti-HBc/HBsAg donors can be identified retrospectively where stored serum is available for testing. The prevalence of anti-HBc Italian organ donors, the incidence of HBV transmission according to the recipients' HBV status (vaccinated, recovered, or naive), and the clinical impact (5-year graft and patient survival rates) in the North Italy Transplant program was evaluated by retrospectively screening for anti-HBc antibodies in the sera of cadaver kidney donors used in transplants from 1997 to 1999. Two hundred and ten donors were found to have been anti-HBc. At the time of the study, no active infection was observed in any of the 344 HBsAg recipients, but 4/140 (2.86%) of the vaccinated recipients were found to have been anti-HBc/HBsAg. None of these patients, however, had any biochemical or clinical history of HBV infection. Patient and graft survival rates of anti-HBc or anti-HBc kidney recipients did not differ statistically. Kidney grafts from anti-HBc donors should be considered in all recipients because the benefit obtained from the transplantation out weighs the negligible risk of HBV transmission.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/01.tp.0000189930.89031.1b
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Data on HBV transmission to kidney transplant recipients from donor organs that were anti-HBc/HBsAg in Italy has not been previously reported. Anti-HBc testing in cadaver organ donors has been mandatory in Italy since 2002, when anti-HBc determinations were included in the National Guidelines for donor evaluation. Therefore, prior to that date kidney recipients from anti-HBc/HBsAg donors can be identified retrospectively where stored serum is available for testing. The prevalence of anti-HBc Italian organ donors, the incidence of HBV transmission according to the recipients' HBV status (vaccinated, recovered, or naive), and the clinical impact (5-year graft and patient survival rates) in the North Italy Transplant program was evaluated by retrospectively screening for anti-HBc antibodies in the sera of cadaver kidney donors used in transplants from 1997 to 1999. Two hundred and ten donors were found to have been anti-HBc. At the time of the study, no active infection was observed in any of the 344 HBsAg recipients, but 4/140 (2.86%) of the vaccinated recipients were found to have been anti-HBc/HBsAg. None of these patients, however, had any biochemical or clinical history of HBV infection. Patient and graft survival rates of anti-HBc or anti-HBc kidney recipients did not differ statistically. 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At the time of the study, no active infection was observed in any of the 344 HBsAg recipients, but 4/140 (2.86%) of the vaccinated recipients were found to have been anti-HBc/HBsAg. None of these patients, however, had any biochemical or clinical history of HBV infection. Patient and graft survival rates of anti-HBc or anti-HBc kidney recipients did not differ statistically. Kidney grafts from anti-HBc donors should be considered in all recipients because the benefit obtained from the transplantation out weighs the negligible risk of HBV transmission.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pmid>16421480</pmid><doi>10.1097/01.tp.0000189930.89031.1b</doi><tpages>5</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Child
Child, Preschool
Female
Hepatitis B - immunology
Hepatitis B - transmission
Hepatitis B Antibodies - analysis
Hepatitis B Antibodies - immunology
Hepatitis B Core Antigens - immunology
Hepatitis B virus
Hepatitis B virus - immunology
Humans
Infant
Italy
Kidney Transplantation
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Biological
Retrospective Studies
Tissue Donors
title Kidney transplantation from anti-HBc+ donors: results from a retrospective Italian study
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