Abstract

Blood transfusion is a recently reported route of hepatitis E virus (HEV) transmission. It is a bigger concern in regions where large-scale HEV genotype 1 infections occur causing more severe disease. The present study aims to assess the prevalence and rate of HEV infection in the blood donors of Pune, India. A total of 2447 healthy blood donors were screened for anti-HEV IgG and IgM antibodies. Anti-HEV IgM antibody positives were further subjected to alanine aminotransferase measurement, HEV RNA detection, viral load quantification and phylogenetic analysis. Anti-HEV seroprevalence rate was 17.70%, while IgM prevalence rate was 0.20%. An age dependent increase in IgG seropositive rate was observed. Two of five IgM-positives tested positive for HEV RNA. The viral load ranged from 3.5 × 104 to 4.6 × 105 copies/mL and belonged to HEV genotype 1. HEV prevalence rate of 17.70% in the blood donors of Pune, India, a developing country, goes at par with the developed countries. Current data of 0.20% (5 of 2447) blood donors positive for anti-HEV IgM and two of them being HEV RNA positive suggest a need for consideration of cost-effective evaluation towards pooled HEV RNA testing in blood banks.

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