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Proposal to Prepare Reference Panels & Standards for Hepatitis E Virus. Sally Baylis Viral Safety, Paul-Ehrlich-Institut. SoGAT XXI, Brussels, 28th-29th May 2009. Hepatitis E Virus (HEV). Water borne, spread via faeces, causes acute hepatitis, with major outbreaks
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Proposal to Prepare Reference Panels & Standards for Hepatitis E Virus Sally Baylis Viral Safety, Paul-Ehrlich-Institut SoGAT XXI, Brussels, 28th-29th May 2009
Hepatitis E Virus (HEV) • Water borne, spread via faeces, causes acute hepatitis, with major outbreaks • Mortality rates amongst pregnant women are ~20%; overall mortality 0.5-4%, higher in those with chronic liver disease • Worldwide occurrence, but particular problem in developing countries. Endemic in Africa, SE Asia, Middle East, Central America – poor sanitation • Emerging infection in industrialized countries. Better awareness, better diagnostics or a genuine rise in infections?
Small non-enveloped RNA virus (~32-34 nm), Hepeviridae family Five virus genotypes; types 1 and 2 infect humans; types 3 & 4 infect pigs, boar & deer; type 5 is a distantly related avian virus; 23-31% divergence Genotypes 3 & 4 are zoonotic & infect humans. High seroprevalence in pig herds, virus detected in meat products (Wichmann et al., JID, 2008) HEV shed in faeces, but also causes a viraemia ~107 copies/ml plasma HEV - Characteristics of the Virus
Normally causes acute hepatitis, however emerging as a cause of chronic liver disease in organ transplant recipients; may remain neg. for anti-HEV (e.g. Kamar et al., NEJM 2008) Transmitted by transfusion with cases reported in endemic & non-endemic areas Saudi Arabia, Japan, UK & France Platelets, red cells Elevated levels of ALT, some develop acute hepatitis, or may become persistently infected Genotypes 3 & 4 identified in TTI cases Seroprevalence in blood donors e.g. Bavarian Red Cross ~10% seropositive, France ~3.2% Swedish pig farmers ~13% HEV – Transplantation & Transfusion
Blood donors with elevated levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) can be infected with HEV Hokkaido, Japan ALT > 500 IU/l HEV RNA was detected in ~20% of samples Blood donors in Hokkaido (1 in 8,300 donors) Nationwide Japan ALT > 200 IU/l HEV RNA 1.1% (gt 3 and 4) anti-HEV IgM 1.0% anti-HEV IgG 3.2% (Sakata et al., 2008, Transfusion) HEV RNA positive plasma samples may be ALT negative HEV - Blood Donation
HEV and Plasma Derivatives • Haemophiliacs have high level of anti-HEV (16% vs 3% in blood donors in Japan), patients < 20 years old did not have antibodies and had received virus-inactivated coagulation factors (Toyoda et al., 2008) • Pasteurization of albumin at 60ºC, 5 h, slow inactivation kinetics (similar to CPV), reduction factor (Rf) of ≤2 log10 (Yunoki et al., Vox Sang. 2008) • Lypohilized fibrinogen preparations, slight difference observed Rfs dependent upon stabilizer composition. After 24 h, 80ºC Rf ≥4.0 log10 • HEV is completely removed by 20 nm filters
Issues Concerning Blood Components and Plasma Derivatives • Possible concern for blood for transfusion, ALT testing may remove HEV positive units • Possible concern for S/D treated plasma (analagous to HAV NAT and S/D plasma. Ph. Eur. 01/2009:1646, declining levels of anti-HAV in start pools) • The availability of NAT standards for HEV could facilitate the introduction of screening as required
HEV and Plasma Fractionation Pools • Plasma pools from different manufacturers worldwide were tested for HEV RNA by PCR • Plasma was extracted using the Roche AmpliPrep (TNAI kit) • HEV RNA was detected by conventional and real-time PCR using primers and probes targeting conserved regions of ORF2 and ORF3 (modified Jothikumar et al., 2006; Gyarmati et al., 2008)
Analysis of Plasma Pools for HEV RNA • Approximately 10% of plasma pools tested are positive for HEV RNA • Genotype 3 and genotype 4 viruses have been identified, sequence analysis is on-going • Viral loads of positive pools identified to date are below 1000 copies/ml plasma
Proposal for an HEV RNA Standard • Clinical use: where patients present with hepatitis, but the cause can not be ascertained; specialist reference laboratories • Blood screening use: plasma donations for use in S/D treated plasma, analogous to HAV RNA (manufacturers & associated control laboratories) • Vaccine studies, monitoring viral loads • Development of assays • EQA providers, HEV serology already in place
Candidate Materials • Viraemic plasma of genotypes 3 or 4 • Bile from swine; high titre genotype 3 HEV samples, work well in several different conventional and real-time PCR assays targeting conserved regions of the HEV genome • Viral loads in two particular samples are > 9 log10 copies/ml bile and > 10 log10 copies per ml of bile • Confirmed by 2 different qPCR assays, and end-point dilution (Thomas Gärtner, Octapharma)
Proposed Study • It is proposed to perform an initial study using dilutional panels, of blinded samples • Determine the most suitable virus strain for further development as a standard • Provide information on assay performance • Laboratories wishing to participate in this study should contact: Sally Baylis baysa@pei.de