ASSOCIATION BULLETIN
#03-14
| Date: |
October 10, 2003 |
| To: |
AABB Members |
| From: |
Roger Y. Dodd, PhD - President
Karen Shoos Lipton, JD - Chief Executive Officer |
| Re: |
Deferral for Risk of Leishmaniasis Exposure |
Due to the risk of transfusion-transmitted leishmania, blood collection
facilities should begin deferring prospective donors who have been
to Iraq as soon as possible, but no later than October 30, 2003.
The deferral is effective for 12 months from the last date of departure
from Iraq. The Armed Services Blood Program (ASBP) has reported
cases of leishmaniasis among personnel stationed in Iraq and is
implementing a 12-month deferral for individuals who have traveled
to Iraq. The ASBP has required that this deferral be implemented
by all armed services blood collection facilities by October 30,
2003.
Armed services personnel, especially members of the National Guard,
often donate regularly at civilian facilities. Therefore, all blood
collection facilities should implement this deferral no later than
October 30, 2003, for consistency with the ASBP policy. The deferral
applies to the whole country of Iraq and includes any civilians,
contractors, or other individuals who have visited the country,
in addition to service personnel stationed there.
A similar deferral was in effect from August 1, 1990 to January
1, 1993 as a result of Operation Desert Storm. As was the case from
1990 to 1993, blood collection facilities are not required to ask
donors specifically whether they have visited Iraq because donors
are asked about their travel outside of the United States and Canada
in the past 3 years. A response that indicates the donor has traveled
to Iraq should be considered reason for a 12-month deferral from
the last date of departure from Iraq.
The impact of this deferral on the blood supply is expected to
be significant, although it is difficult to project the exact number
of donors who will be deferred. The heightened concern over Iraq
is a result of the large number of individuals likely to have been
exposed to leishmaniasis that are expected to return to the U.S.
in the near future.
There are no expectations that look-back will be necessary at this
time. In addition, it should be noted that donors of plasma intended
for further manufacture need not be similarly deferred.
Background
Leishmania spp. are intracellular protozoan parasites that
cause leishmaniasis. As a group, they cause a spectrum of disease
in humans that ranges from simple, self-curing cutaneous lesions
to visceral infections associated with parasitism of the reticuloendothelial
system1.
The Leishmania spp. are primarily endemic to the subtropical
and tropical areas of the Middle East, Mediterranean coast, Asia,
Africa, Central America and South America. The parasite is transmitted
to humans through the bite of a Leishmania-infected sand
fly. The incubation period can vary from days to years, but detectable
infections generally appear within months of infection. Thus, the
one-year deferral period should be sufficient to prevent the collection
of blood from a Leishmania-infected, yet asymptomatic donor,
in virtually all cases. However, this deferral period does not rule
out the possibility of rare, asymptomatic, chronic carriers, although
scientific evidence of such carriers remains equivocal.
There have been at least 10 probable or confirmed cases of transfusion-transmitted
leishmaniasis reported in the literature2-9. Several
of these cases occurred more than 40 years ago and the majority
of infected recipients were young children or neonates. In all cases
where Leishmania spp. were identified, infections were
attributed to either L. donovani or L. infantum,
which cause visceral disease. In Iraq, leishmaniasis appears in
cutaneous and visceral forms that are caused by several species
of Leishmania. At this time it is unclear what species
of Leishmania U.S. military personnel have been exposed
to in Iraq, but based on the literature and past experience with
L. tropica, all species should be of concern. Leishmania
tropica has been proven to survive for at least 25 days in
blood products stored under standard conditions10.
Conditions in Iraq have produced an environment favorable to sand
fly reproduction and positive vector monitoring indicates sand flies
are infected with Leishmania spp. Several cases of leishmaniasis
have recently been diagnosed in U.S. armed services personnel deployed
to Iraq.
References
- Herwaldt BL. Leishmaniasis. Lancet 1999;354:1191-9.
- Magill AJ, Grögl M, Gasser RA, et al. Visceral infection
caused by Leishmania tropica in veterans of Operation
Desert Storm. N Engl J Med 1993;328:1383-7.
- Chung H-L, Chow H-K, Lu J-P. The first two cases of transfusion
kala-azar. Chinese Med J 1948;66:325-6.
- André R, Brumpt L, Dreyfus B, et al. Cutaneous leishmaniasis,
cutaneous-glandular leishmaniasis and transfusional kala-azar.
Trop Dis Bull 1958;44:379-81.
- Kostmann R, Barr M, Bengtsson E, et al. Kala-azar transferred
by exchange blood transfusions in two Swedish infants. Proceedings
of the Seventh International Congress of Tropical Medicine and
Malaria. 1963;2:384.
- Cohen C, Corazza F, De Mol P, Brasseur D. Leishmaniasis acquired
in t Belgium (letter). Lancet 1991;338:128.
- Mauny I, Blanchot I, Degeilh B, et al. [Visceral leishmaniasis
in an infant in Brittany: Discussion on the modes of transmission
outside of the endemic zone]. Pediatrie 1993;48:237-9.
- Cummins D, Amin S, Halil O, et al. Visceral leishmaniasis after
cardiac surgery. Arch Dis Child 1995;72:235-6.
- Singh S, Chaudhry VP, Wali JP. Transfusion-transmitted kala-azar
in India. Transfusion 1996;36:848-9.
- Grögl M, Daugirda JL, Hoover DL, et al. Survivability
and infectivity of viscerotropic Leishmania tropica from
Operation Desert Storm participants in human blood products maintained
under blood bank conditions. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1993;49:308-15.
Association Bulletin #03-14 (PDF
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