Hepatitis C Virus Seropositivity in Repeatedly Transfused Thalassemia Major Patients

Authors

  • Muhammad Younus Department of Pathology
  • Khalid Hassan Department of Pathology
  • Nadeem Ikram Department of Pathology
  • Lubna Naseem Department of Pathology
  • Hassan Abbas Zaheer Department of Pathology

Keywords:

Anti-HCV antibodies;, Thalassemia major, Safe blood transfusion

Abstract

Multiple transfusions in patients of thalassemia major who are conventionally treated by a regular transfusion regimen, are at a risk of developing Transfusion Transmitted Infections (TTIs), including HCV-hepatitis. Strict criteria of safe donor selection have to be adopted in order to minimize the risk of TTIs. The present study was conducted to evaluate the seropositivity of anti-HCV antibodies in multiply transfused thalassemia major patients. A total of 75 patients of thalassemia major who had received at least 10 transfusions were tested for anti-HCV antibodies, using third generation ELISA kits. Amongst these patients, 42% were seropositive for anti-HCV antibodies. This is a high prevalence rate and calls for a critical look into the prevailing transfusion practices and adoption of stricter donor selection criteria.

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Published

2018-10-23

Issue

Section

Original article

How to Cite

1.
Younus M, Hassan K, Ikram N, Naseem L, Zaheer HA. Hepatitis C Virus Seropositivity in Repeatedly Transfused Thalassemia Major Patients. Int J Pathol [Internet]. 2018 Oct. 23 [cited 2024 Jul. 22];:20-3. Available from: https://jpathology.com/index.php/OJS/article/view/15