Donor Screening for Human T‐cell Lymphotrophic Virus 1/2: Changing Paradigms for Changing Testing Capacity

Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) policy currently requires the testing of all potential organ donors for human T‐cell lymphotrophic virus (HTLV)‐1/2. Most Organ Procurement Organizations (OPO) use the Abbott HTLV‐I/HTLV‐II Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA). This assay will no longer be manufac...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of transplantation 2010-02, Vol.10 (2), p.207-213
Hauptverfasser: Kaul, D. R., Taranto, S., Alexander, C., Covington, S., Marvin, M., Nowicki, M., Orlowski, J., Pancoska, C., Pruett, T. L., Ison, M. G.
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container_end_page 213
container_issue 2
container_start_page 207
container_title American journal of transplantation
container_volume 10
creator Kaul, D. R.
Taranto, S.
Alexander, C.
Covington, S.
Marvin, M.
Nowicki, M.
Orlowski, J.
Pancoska, C.
Pruett, T. L.
Ison, M. G.
description Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) policy currently requires the testing of all potential organ donors for human T‐cell lymphotrophic virus (HTLV)‐1/2. Most Organ Procurement Organizations (OPO) use the Abbott HTLV‐I/HTLV‐II Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA). This assay will no longer be manufactured after December 31, 2009; the only commercially available FDA‐licensed assay will be the Abbott PRISM HTLV‐I/II assay which poses many challenges to OPO use for organ donor screening. As a result, screening donors for HTLV‐1/2 in a timely manner pretransplant after December 31, 2009 will be challenging. The true incidence of HTLV‐1 in United States (U.S.) organ donors is not well described but appears to be low (∼0.03–0.5%). HTLV‐1 is associated with malignancy and neurological disease; HTLV‐2 has not been convincingly associated with disease in humans. Donors that are HTLV‐1/2 seropositive are infrequently used despite most results being either false positive or resulting from HTLV‐2 infection. There is urgent need to encourage the development of assays, instruments and platforms optimized for organ donors that can be used to screen for transmissible disease in donors; these must have appropriate sensitivity and specificity to identify all infections while minimizing organ loss through false positive testing. HTLV‐1/2 screening in the solid organ donor population is increasingly challenging: donors that are HTLV1/2 positive are infrequently used despite most results being either false positive or due to HTLV‐2, which has not been associated with disease.
See editorial by Humar on page 199.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1600-6143.2009.02867.x
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Donor evaluation
Donor Selection
Donors
donor‐to‐host transmission
Enzyme immunoassay
Human T-lymphotropic virus 1
Human T-lymphotropic virus 1 - isolation & purification
Human T-lymphotropic virus 2
Human T-lymphotropic virus 2 - isolation & purification
Humans
Immunoenzyme Techniques
Infection
Infectious diseases
Lymphocytes T
Male
Malignancy
Medical sciences
Neurological diseases
Prevention and actions
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Sensitivity and Specificity
Surgery (general aspects). Transplantations, organ and tissue grafts. Graft diseases
T-Lymphocytes
Tissue and Organ Procurement
Tissue Donors
Transplantation
Transplants
United States
Viral diseases
viral infection
Viruses
title Donor Screening for Human T‐cell Lymphotrophic Virus 1/2: Changing Paradigms for Changing Testing Capacity
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