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SAN DIEGO – After funding was discontinued for individual donation (ID) nucleic acid testing (NAT) of blood donations, the risk of transfusion-related infections in Denmark increased. But according to new findings presented here at the American Association of Blood Banks annual meeting, that policy was short lived.

SOURCE: Baudewijn L et al. AABB 2017. Abstract P4-A03A.

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SAN DIEGO – After funding was discontinued for individual donation (ID) nucleic acid testing (NAT) of blood donations, the risk of transfusion-related infections in Denmark increased. But according to new findings presented here at the American Association of Blood Banks annual meeting, that policy was short lived.

SOURCE: Baudewijn L et al. AABB 2017. Abstract P4-A03A.

 

SAN DIEGO – After funding was discontinued for individual donation (ID) nucleic acid testing (NAT) of blood donations, the risk of transfusion-related infections in Denmark increased. But according to new findings presented here at the American Association of Blood Banks annual meeting, that policy was short lived.

SOURCE: Baudewijn L et al. AABB 2017. Abstract P4-A03A.

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Key clinical point: Denmark reinstated ID NAT screening of blood donations after finding no savings in cost from discontinuing it.

Major finding: Without ID NAT, the estimated increase in the risk for transfusion-transmitted HIV went from 1 patient per 80 years to 1 per 18; for HBV, from 1 per 34 to 1 per 17; and for HCV, the risk increased from 1 per 250 to 1 per 8.

Data source: An incidence/window model estimating the residual risk of transfusion-transmitted viral infections following Denmark’s decision not to fund ID NAT testing.

Disclosures: The authors had no relevant financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Baudewijn L et al. AABB 2017. Abstract P4-A03A.

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