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Variant of mad cow disease may be transmitted by blood transfusions
By news release
Aug 28, 2008 - 10:00:56 AM
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Contact: Becka Livesay
rlivesay@hematology.org
202-776-0544
American Society of Hematology
Variant of mad cow disease may be transmitted by blood transfusions, according to animal study
(WASHINGTON, August 28, 2008) – Blood
transfusions are a valuable treatment mechanism in modern medicine, but
can come with the risk of donor disease transmission. Researchers are
continually studying the biology of blood products to understand how
certain diseases are transmitted in an effort to reduce this risk
during blood transfusions. According to a study in sheep prepublished
online in
Blood, the official journal of the American Society
of Hematology, the risk of transmitting bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE, commonly known as "mad cow disease") by blood
transfusion is surprisingly high.
BSE is one of a group of
rare neurodegenerative disorders called transmissible spongiform
encephalopathies (TSEs), and there is no reliable non-invasive test for
detecting infection before the onset of clinical disease. In addition
to BSE, these diseases include scrapie, a closely related disease in
sheep, and Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans, which causes
neurological symptoms such as unsteadiness and involuntary movements
that develop as the illness progresses, rendering late-stage sufferers
completely immobile at the time of death.
A new variant of
CJD (termed vCJD) was recognized in the United Kingdom in the
mid-1990s, apparently as a result of the transmission of BSE to humans.
Because the symptoms of this disease can take many years to appear, it
was not known how many people might have been infected, and without a
reliable test for identifying these individuals, clinicians were very
concerned that the infection could be transmitted between people by
blood transfusion or contaminated surgical and dental instruments. As a
result, costly control measures were introduced as a precautionary
measure to reduce the risk of disease transmission, although at the
time it was unclear whether there really was a significant risk or
whether the control measures would be effective. This sheep study
sought to better understand how readily TSEs could be transmitted by
blood transfusion in order to help develop more targeted controls.
"It
is vitally important that we better understand the mechanisms of
disease transmission during blood transfusions so we can develop the
most effective control measures and minimize human-to-human
infections," said Dr. Fiona Houston, now a Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Glasgow, UK, and lead author of the study.
The
nine-year study conducted at the University of Edinburgh compared rates
of disease transmission by examining blood transfusions from sheep
infected with BSE or scrapie; the BSE donors were experimentally
infected, while the scrapie donors had naturally acquired the disease.
While scrapie is not thought to transmit to humans, it was included as
an infection acquired under field conditions, which could possibly give
different results than those obtained from experimentally infected
animals. Because of the similarity in size of sheep and humans, the
team was able to collect and transfuse volumes of blood equivalent to
those taken from human blood donors.
The outcome of the
experiment showed that both BSE and scrapie could be effectively
transmitted between sheep by blood transfusion. Importantly, the team
noted that transmission could occur when blood was collected from
donors before they developed signs of disease, but was more likely when
they were in the later stages of infection. Of the 22 sheep who
received infected blood from the BSE donor group, five showed signs of
TSEs and three others showed evidence of infection without clinical
signs, yielding an overall transmission rate of 36 percent. Of the 21
infected scrapie recipients, nine developed clinical scrapie, yielding
an overall transmission rate of 43 percent.
Investigators
noted that the results were consistent with what is known about the
four recorded cases of vCJD acquired by blood transfusion in humans. In
addition to the stage of infection in the donor, factors such as
genetic variation in disease susceptibility and the blood component
transfused may influence the transmission rate by transfusion in both
sheep and humans.
"The study shows that, for sheep infected
with BSE or scrapie, transmission rates via blood transfusion can be
high, particularly when donors are in the later stages of infection.
This suggests that blood transfusion represents an efficient route of
transmission for these diseases," said Dr. Houston. "Since the results
are consistent with what we know about human transmission, the work
helps justify the control measures put in place to safeguard human
blood supplies. It also shows that blood from BSE- and scrapie-infected
sheep could be used effectively in non-human experiments to answer
important questions, such as which blood components are most heavily
infected, and to develop much-needed diagnostic tests."
###
The American Society of Hematology (
www.hematology.org)
is the world's largest professional society concerned with the causes
and treatment of blood disorders. Its mission is to further the
understanding, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disorders
affecting blood, bone marrow, and the immunologic, hemostatic, and
vascular systems, by promoting research, clinical care, education,
training, and advocacy in hematology.