| Investigations of West Nile Virus
Infections in Recipients of Organ Transplantation and Blood Transfusion
Michigan, 2002
Sep 27 2002
CDC, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA), and state and local health departments
continue to investigate West Nile virus (WNV) infections in recipients
of organ transplantation and blood transfusion. This report summarizes
two investigations of Michigan recipients of blood products, one of whom
also received a liver transplant (1). Both persons tested positive for
WNV infection after receiving blood products derived from a single blood
donation subsequently found to have evidence of WNV. These
investigations provide further evidence that WNV is transmitted through
blood transfusion.
On August 14, 2002, a man aged 47 years received a liver transplant
and 24 units of blood products (9 units of fresh frozen plasma [FFP], 5
units of red blood cells [RBC], and 10 units of platelet concentrate
[PC]). On August 20 and 21, he received 15 units of PC. After being
discharged from the hospital on August 24, he was readmitted 10 days
later with fever; he subsequently developed encephalopathy. A lumbar
puncture revealed elevated protein, a lymphocytic pleocytosis, and WNV
IgM antibody; the patient recovered and was discharged. Retention
segments* were available for 20 donors; one retention segment was
positive for WNV by kinetic quantitative PCR assay (TaqManŽ), and the
remaining 19 were negative.
On September 2, a woman aged 40 years delivered a healthy infant. The
same day, she received one unit of RBC, and on September 3, she received
another unit of RBC. She was discharged on September 4. She had
intermittent nausea, malaise, and fever, and was readmitted to the
hospital 13 days after discharge. On September 18, the patient had a
fever of 102.8 degrees F (39.3 degrees C). A lumbar puncture revealed
mildly elevated protein, a lymphocytic pleocytosis, and WNV IgM
antibody. Blood center records indicated that the RBC unit transfused on
September 3 was derived from the same donation subsequently found to be
polymerase chain reaction-positive as the PC received by the liver
transplant recipient on August 20. On the day of delivery, the patient
began breastfeeding. A sample of breast milk obtained 16 days later
tested positive for WNV by TaqManŽ and for WNVspecific IgM antibody.
The patient recovered and was discharged. The infant was breastfed
during September 2-19 and remains healthy.
_________________________
*Blood samples from tubing that had been attached to the original
donor
collection bag.
Reported by:
Michigan Dept of Community Health. Center for Biologics,
Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration. Div of
Vector-Borne Viral Diseases, Div of AIDS, STD, and TB Laboratory
Research, National Center for Infectious Diseases; Epidemiology Program
Office; Div of Physical Activity and Nutrition, National Center for
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; and an EIS Officer, CDC.
Editorial Note:
This report describes two patients who tested positive for WNV
infection after receipt of blood products from a single donation. The
retention segment from the donation was positive for WNV by TaqManŽ.
Although it is possible that both persons became infected from mosquito
bites, these findings indicate that the patients became infected through
transfusion of blood products. An ongoing investigation in Mississippi
isolated WNV in FFP. The retention segment from the donation from which
this FFP was made was positive for WNV by TaqManŽ, and the donor
developed WNV specific IgM antibody after donation. The ongoing
investigation provides additional evidence that WNV can be transmitted
through blood transfusion (1). Additional case investigations conducted
by CDC, FDA, and health departments will help to define the risk for WNV
transmission through blood transfusion and organ transplantation.
Because of the risk for WNV transmission through blood transfusion,
efforts to develop a blood screening test are under way.
WNV RNA has not been identified previously in breast milk, and no
studies are known that define the implications of this laboratory
finding. Laboratory investigations, including attempts to culture WNV
from additional breast milk samples, are under way. Until live virus is
cultured from breast milk, or until definitive data are obtained to
document WNV transmission through breast milk, the TaqManŽ findings
described in this report should be interpreted with caution.
The risk for transmission of WNV from mother to infant through
breastfeeding is unknown. The infant described in this report remains
healthy despite breastfeeding for 17 days. Until follow-up testing on
the infant is completed, it is unknown whether the infant was infected
with WNV. The health benefits of breastfeeding are well established (2),
and these findings do not suggest a change in breastfeeding
recommendations.
References
1. CDC. Update: investigations of West Nile virus infections in
recipients of organ transplantation and blood transfusion. MMWR
2002;51:833-6.
2. Lawrence RA. Breastfeeding: a guide for the medical profession. 4th
ed. St. Louis, Missouri: Mosby, 1994. All MMWR references are available
on the Internet at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr.
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