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10-year analysis of human immunodeficiency virus incidence in first-time and repeat donors in Brazil
de Oliveira Garcia Mateos, S., Preiss, L., Gonçalez, T. T., Di Lorenzo Oliveira, C., Grebe, E., Di Germanio, C., Stone, M., Amorim Filho, L., Carneiro Proietti, A. B., Belisario, A. R., de Almeida-Neto, C., Mendrone-Junior, A., Loureiro, P., Busch, M. P., Custer, B., Cerdeira Sabino, E., & Recipient Epidemiology, Donor Evaluation Study (REDS-III) International Component Brazil (2021). 10-year analysis of human immunodeficiency virus incidence in first-time and repeat donors in Brazil. Vox Sanguinis, 116(2), 207-216. Article VOX13002. https://doi.org/10.1111/vox.13002
Background and objectives Incidence in first-time and repeat blood donors is an important measure of transfusion-transmitted HIV infection (TT-HIV) risk. This study assessed HIV incidence over time at four large blood centres in Brazil. Materials and methods Donations were screened and confirmed using serological assays for HIV from 2007 to 2016, and additionally screened by nucleic acid testing from 2011 forward. Limiting antigen (LAg) avidity testing was conducted on HIV seroreactive samples from first-time donors to classify whether an infection was recently acquired. We calculated incidence in first-time donors using the mean duration of recent infection and in repeat donors using classical methods. Time and demographic trends were assessed using Poisson regression. Results Over the 10-year period, HIV incidence in first-time donors was highest in Recife (45 center dot 1/100 000 person-years (10(5)py)) followed by Sao Paulo (32 center dot 2/10(5)py) and then Belo Horizonte (23 center dot 3/10(5)py), and in repeat donors was highest in Recife (33 center dot 2/10(5)py), Belo Horizonte (27 center dot 5/10(5)py) and Sao Paulo (17 center dot 0/10(5)py). Results from Rio de Janeiro were available from 2013 to 2016 with incidence in first-time donors of 35 center dot 9/10(5)py and repeat donors from 2011 to 2016 of 29 center dot 2/10(5)py. Incidence varied by other donor demographics. When incidence was considered in 2-year intervals, no significant trend was evident. Overall residual risk of TT-HIV was 5 center dot 46 and 7 center dot 41 per million units of pRBC and FFP transfused, respectively. Conclusion HIV incidence in both first-time and repeat donors varied by region in Brazil. Clear secular trends were not evident.