Hepatitis B Blood Donor Screening Data: An Under-Recognized Resource for Canadian Public Health Surveillance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. CBS Donor Screening Questions
2.2. Testing Methodology
2.3. Infection Definitions
2.4. Epidemiology Donor Database
2.5. Case-Control
2.6. Statistical Analysis
2.6.1. Comparison of First-Time Blood Donors with the General Population
2.6.2. First-Time Donor Hepatitis B Period Prevalence and Factors Associated with Testing Positive for Hepatitis B Seromarkers
2.6.3. Case-Control Study Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Province | Type of Hepatitis B Vaccination Program | First Birth Year Eligible to Receive Free Routine Hepatitis B Vaccination | |
---|---|---|---|
Routine Infant Program | Routine School-Based Program 1 | ||
British Columbia 6 | 2001–present | 1992–2001 (6th grade) | 1981 |
Alberta 6 | 2018–present | 1995–present (5th grade) | 1985 |
Saskatchewan | - | 1995–present (6th grade) | 1984 |
Manitoba | - | 1998–2017 (4th grade) 2 | 1989 |
Ontario | - | 1994–present (7th grade) | 1982 |
New Brunswick 5 | 1995–present | 1995–2005 (4th grade) | 1986 |
Prince Edward Island 6 | 1995–present | 1995–2010 (3rd grade) | 1987 |
Nova Scotia | - | 1995–2010 (4th grade) 3 | 1986 |
Newfoundland | - | 1995–2012 (4th grade) 4 | 1986 |
Reasons for Donation Deferral |
---|
Feeling unwell |
Post-exposure hepatitis B prophylaxis |
Had hepatitis B or C, ever |
Had hepatitis (other than B or C) in last 6 months |
Exposure to someone with hepatitis (viral or cause unknown) in last 12 months |
Tattoo, skin, or ear piercing in last 3 months |
Acupuncture or electrolysis in last 6 months (if not single use needle) |
Needlestick injury in last 6 months |
Intravenous drug use, ever |
Sex with a sex trade worker in last 12 months |
Received money or drugs for sex since 1977 |
Lived in certain Sub-Saharan African countries since 1977 (discontinued in 2018) |
Test Profile | ‘Likely Clinical Scenario’ Number and Name |
---|---|
1. Anti-HBc reactive HBsAg negative HBV NAT negative | 1. Resolved infection |
2. Anti-HBc reactive HBsAg positive HBV NAT positive or negative | 2. Chronic infection * |
3. Anti-HBc reactive HBsAg negative HBV NAT positive | 3. Occult infection |
4. Anti-HBc non-reactive HBsAg negative HBV NAT negative | 4. Never infected |
Variable | Categories | First-Time Blood Donors (%) | Canadian General Population (17 Years and Older) a (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Sex | Female | 54.0 | 51.3 |
Male | 46.0 | 48.7 | |
Age group | 17–29 | 53.5 | 19.7 |
30–39 | 17.2 | 17.0 | |
40–49 | 14.7 | 32.2 | |
50+ | 14.6 | 31.1 | |
Region | British Columbia | 15.2 | 18.1 |
Alberta | 18.1 | 14.5 | |
Saskatchewan | 4.8 | 3.7 | |
Manitoba | 5.9 | 4.5 | |
Ontario | 46.8 | 50.3 | |
Atlantic Canada | 9.2 | 8.7 |
9 April 2005 to 28 February 2011 | 1 March 2011 to 31 December 2020 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|
Number of first-time CBS donors | 507,165 | 894,438 | 1,401,603 |
Type of hepatitis B screening test performed on first-time CBS donors | Overall number of hepatitis B screening tests performed on first-time CBS donors (% positive) | ||
Anti-HBc | 507,165 (1.31) | 894,438 (1.41) | 1,401,603 (1.37%) |
HBsAg | 507,165 (0.07) | 894,438 (0.05) | 1,401,603 (0.056%) |
NAT 1 | 6681 (5.03) | 894,438 (0.05) | See footnote 1 |
Hepatitis B screening test | Number of first-time CBS donors testing positive (Percent of positive tests %) | ||
Anti-HBc only 2 | 6252 (1.23) | 12,108 (1.35) | 18,360 (1.31%) |
NAT only 3 | ----- | 2 (0.0002) | See footnote 1 |
HBsAg only 4,5 | 5 (0.001) | 4 (0.0006) | 9 (0.0006%) |
Anti-HBc and HBsAg only 4 | 40 (0.008) | 39 (0.004) | 79 (0.006%) |
Anti-HBc and NAT only 2 | 33 (0.007) | 28 (0.003) | 61 (0.004%) |
HBsAg and NAT only 4,5 | 1 (0.01) | 1 (0.0001) | 2 (0.0001%) |
Anti-HBc and HBsAg and NAT 4 | 302 (0.06) | 395 (0.04) | 697 (0.05%) |
All positive anti-HBc tests | 6627 (1.31%) | 12,570 (1.41%) | 19,197 (1.37%) |
All positive HBsAg tests | 348 (0.07%) | 439 (0.05%) | 787 (0.056%) |
All positive NAT 1 tests | See footnote 1 | 426 (0.05%) | See footnote 1 |
Variable | Categories | Odds Ratio (OR) | 95% CI |
---|---|---|---|
Year of donation | - | 0.972 | 0.957–0.988 |
Sex | Female | Ref. 1 | - |
Male | 3.150 | 2.689–3.691 | |
Birth Cohort | Hepatitis B vaccine eligible | Ref. 1 | - |
Hepatitis B vaccine ineligible | 1.871 | 1.616–2.166 | |
Province or region of residence * | Ontario | Ref. 1 | - |
British Columbia | 1.256 | 1.043–1.512 | |
Alberta | 0.939 | 0.777–1.135 | |
Saskatchewan | 0.897 | 0.635–1.268 | |
Manitoba | 0.667 | 0.475–0.935 | |
Atlantic Canada ** | 0.219 | 0.136–0.351 |
Variable | Categories | Odds Ratio (OR) | 95% CI |
---|---|---|---|
Year of donation | - | 1.013 | 1.010–1.017 |
Sex | Female | Ref. 1 | - |
Male | 1.641 | 1.593–1.691 | |
Age | - | 1.020 | 1.018–1.021 |
Birth Cohort | Hepatitis B vaccine eligible | Ref. 1 | - |
Hepatitis B vaccine ineligible | 3.513 | 3.328–3.708 | |
Province or region of residence at the time of blood donation | Ontario | Ref. 1 | - |
British Columbia | 1.240 | 1.193–1.289 | |
Alberta | 0.973 | 0.936–1.012 | |
Saskatchewan | 0.626 | 0.574–0.682 | |
Manitoba | 0.699 | 0.652–0.750 | |
Atlantic Canada | 0.284 | 0.261–0.309 |
Variable | Odds Ratio (OR) | 95% CI | p Value |
---|---|---|---|
Received a blood transfusion (ever) | 3.26 | 1.74–6.11 | 0.0002 |
Lived with someone who had hepatitis (any) | 12.46 | 5.18–29.97 | <0.0001 |
High-risk ethnic origin 1 | 8.39 | 5.91–11.91 | <0.0001 |
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Share and Cite
O’Brien, S.F.; Reedman, C.N.; Osiowy, C.; Bolotin, S.; Yi, Q.-L.; Lourenço, L.; Lewin, A.; Binka, M.; Caffrey, N.; Drews, S.J. Hepatitis B Blood Donor Screening Data: An Under-Recognized Resource for Canadian Public Health Surveillance. Viruses 2023, 15, 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15020409
O’Brien SF, Reedman CN, Osiowy C, Bolotin S, Yi Q-L, Lourenço L, Lewin A, Binka M, Caffrey N, Drews SJ. Hepatitis B Blood Donor Screening Data: An Under-Recognized Resource for Canadian Public Health Surveillance. Viruses. 2023; 15(2):409. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15020409
Chicago/Turabian StyleO’Brien, Sheila F., Cassandra N. Reedman, Carla Osiowy, Shelly Bolotin, Qi-Long Yi, Lillian Lourenço, Antoine Lewin, Mawuena Binka, Niamh Caffrey, and Steven J. Drews. 2023. "Hepatitis B Blood Donor Screening Data: An Under-Recognized Resource for Canadian Public Health Surveillance" Viruses 15, no. 2: 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15020409
APA StyleO’Brien, S. F., Reedman, C. N., Osiowy, C., Bolotin, S., Yi, Q. -L., Lourenço, L., Lewin, A., Binka, M., Caffrey, N., & Drews, S. J. (2023). Hepatitis B Blood Donor Screening Data: An Under-Recognized Resource for Canadian Public Health Surveillance. Viruses, 15(2), 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15020409