SEN virus infection and its relationship to transfusion-associated hepatitis

152Citations
Citations of this article
34Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

SEN virus (SEN-V) is a recently identified single-stranded, circular DNA virus. Two SEN-V variants (SENV-D and SENV-H) were assayed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to investigate their role in the causation of transfusion-associated non-A to E hepatitis. The incidence of SEN-V infection after transfusion was 30% (86 of 286) compared with 3% (3 of 97) among nontransfused controls (P < .001). Transfusion risk increased with the number of units transfused (P < .0001) and donor-recipient linkage for SEN-V was shown by sequence homology. The prevalence of SEN-V in 436 volunteer donors was 1.8%. Among patients with transfusion-associated non-A to E hepatitis, 11 of 12 (92%) were infected with SEN-V at the time of transfusion compared with 55 of 225 (24%) identically followed recipients who did not develop hepatitis (P < .001). No effect of SEN-V on the severity or persistence of coexistent hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection was observed. In 31 infected recipients, SEN-V persisted for greater than 1 year in 45% and for up to 12 years in 13%. SEN-V-specific RNA (a possible replicative intermediate) was recovered from liver tissue. In summary, SENV-D and -H were present in nearly 2% of US donors, and were unequivocally transmitted by transfusion and frequently persisted. The strong association of SEN-V with transfusion-associated non-A to E hepatitis compared with controls raises the possibility, but does not establish that SEN-V might be a causative agent of posttransfusion hepatitis. The vast majority of SEN-V-infected recipients did not develop hepatitis.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Umemura, T., Yeo, A. E. T., Sottini, A., Moratto, D., Tanaka, Y., Wang, R. Y. H., … Alter, H. J. (2001). SEN virus infection and its relationship to transfusion-associated hepatitis. Hepatology, 33(5), 1303–1311. https://doi.org/10.1053/jhep.2001.24268

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free