National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing

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National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing Marek Nowicki, PhD, Scientific Director National Institute of Transplantation, Los Angeles

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National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing. Marek Nowicki, PhD , Scientific Director National Institute of Transplantation, Los Angeles. Important dates…. “Hepatitis C Virus Transmission from an Antibody-Negative Organ and Tissue Donor (MMWR, 2003)” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing

Page 1: National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing

National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing

Marek Nowicki, PhD, Scientific Director

National Institute of Transplantation,Los Angeles

Page 2: National Institute of Transplantation experience with NAT testing

Important dates….“Hepatitis C Virus Transmission from an Antibody-Negative

Organ and Tissue Donor (MMWR, 2003)”

• 2004 AOPO Meeting, New Orleans: NAT is recommended

“Four Transplant Recipients Contract HIV, Hepatitis C From High-Risk Organ Donor (2007)”

• 2008 AOPO Meeting, Park City Utah: ??

“………………..”??

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Why nucleic acids testing? • The donor has negative laboratory test results during the early

stages of infection, known as the window period (HIV and HCV).

• The existence of a chronic carrier state in which a clinically asymptomatic donor will persistently test negative for antibody (HCV).

• Certain viruses have a large degree of genetic diversity and laboratory may fail to identify donors infected with a particular atypical genetic variant (HIV and HCV).

• Laboratory error in performing screening tests; however, the occurrence of such errors is thought to be extremely rare (HIV

and HCV).

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Declining time to detection of HBV, HCV, HIV markers during the window phase following infection

Infection

HCV RNA HCV Ag

EIA 3.0

EIA 2.0

EIA 1.0

0 13 14 70 80 150 (days)

Infection

HIV RNA

p24 Ag

EIA 3.0

0 11 16 22 (days)

HCVHCV

HIVHIV

Infection

HBV DNA

EIA 3.0

0 41 56

HBVHBV

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HCV

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Background

• After successful introduction of screening for antibodies to the hepatitis C virus (HCV) in early 90’s, and more recently, also for HCV RNA, several authors reported a dramatic decrease of new acute HCV infections in the US (Hepatology 2000;31:777-82; Hepatology 1997;26:62S-65S; CDC)

• Others published predictions of HCV epidemic trajectories, showing steady decline of the number of infected individuals in the next 30 years (Davis, LT, 2003)

• Since ‘02 our laboratory has been evaluating HCV serostatus of approx 850 cadaveric organ donors/year. Recently (’05) our testing algorithm was supplemented by the sensitive TMA-based NAT assay detecting HCV RNA.

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Estimated Incidence of Acute HCV Infection, United States,

1960-2001

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001

Year

New

Infe

ctio

ns/1

00,0

00

Decline intransfusion recipients

Decline in injection drug users

Source: Hepatology 2000;31:777-82; Hepatology 1997;26:62S-65S;CDC, unpublished data

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Prevalence of HCV Infection by Age and Gender, United States

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

6-11 12-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70+

Age in Years

% H

CV

+

Males

Females

Total

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Questions

• Is there a significant change or decrease in HCV sero-prevalence among transplant donors?

• What factors are associated with HCV positivity?

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HCV seroprevalence – 3 CA OPOs

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

HC

V%% OPO 3 (S. Cal)

OPO 1 (N. Cal)

OPO 2 (N. Cal)

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Material and Methods

• We tested 4,032 consecutive donors from 3 CA OPOs (2 from N. Cal and 1 from S. Cal)

• Testing period: 2002-2007

– EIA (Ortho), confirmed with RIBA (Chiron)

– After 2005 HCV RNA NAT (Procleix, Chiron)

• Statistical Methods

– Chi-square and logistic regression

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%HCV+ Donors in 3 CA OPOs

0

5

10

15

20

OPO 1 OPO 2 OPO 3Time Period

%02-0304-0506-07

Increase in OPO1, trend not significant in OPO 2 & 3

Year

P=0.01 P=NS P=NS

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%HCV+ Donors by Donor Age

02468

101214161820

0-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 51-60 61-70 >70Donor Age

%OPO 1OPO 2

>80% HCV donors were between age 41-60

P<0.001 for both OPOs

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%HCV+ Donors with other Serology

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

HIV HBsAb HBcAb EBV CMV

%HCV++

NegPos

P<0.001P=0.001

N=21 N=218 N=467 N=1169 N=3319

P=0.048 P=0.012

P<0.001

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Factors Associated with HCV

Factor Reference Odds Ratio, 95% CI P

2004-05 2002-03 1.61, 0.97-2.69 0.065

2006-07 2.03, 1.26-3.30 0.004

Age 41-60 <40 or >60 1.77, 1.20-2.61 0.004

HBcAb+ HBcAb- 9.06, 6.17-13.3 <0.001

• Prevalence of HCV+ increased• HCV is almost twice as likely in 41-60 age group• 9 times more likely when HBcAb positive

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“Take home Message”

• HCV+ rates differ among CA OPOs

• Rates were highest for age 41-60

• Rates increased in 2006-2007 time period

– Change in targeted donor population?

– More stringent testing (NAT)?

– Increased use of non-optimal donors?

• Further studies are needed to examine factors associated with outcomes for HCV+ donors

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HIV-1

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CDC Holds New Annual HIV Infection Estimates in Abeyance Till Next Year

• ATLANTA, Dec. 3: annual U.S. HIV infection rate maybe 50% higher than suspected, the CDC said the new estimate remains tentative.

• The new methodology would boost the estimate of new HIV infections from 40,000 per year to more than 60,000 (K. Fenton, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention)

• Validated estimates will be issued early in 2008, said the CDC.

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Practical aspects of NAT

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Why TMA/Procleix?

• Specifically developed for donor screening under NIH (1996, NLHBI) contract

• First licensed NAT for HIV/HCV

• Robust and well suited for time sensitive applications:

Minimal sample preparation Internal Control (IC) added to each reaction tube

Entire assay performed in one tube

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Roche COBAS AMPLISCREEN v. Chiron Procleix

Ampliscreen - Ampliscreen - 5 steps5 steps*

• Specimen preparation (ultra-centrifugation)

• Reverse transcription of RNA to generate (cDNA)

• Polymerase chain reaction** (PCR) amplification of cDNA

• Hybridization of the amplified products to probes specific to the target

• Detection of the probe-bound products by colorimetric determination

• The entire test process takes approximately 6 hours.

*After the specimen preparation is complete, the remaining processes are fully automated on the COBAS instrument.

**The reverse transcription and PCR amplification of viral target and internal control

target occur simultaneously.

Procleix - Procleix - 3 steps3 steps

• Specimen preparation (target capture with detergent +magnetic microparticles)

• Transcription Mediated Amplification (TMA) to amplify HIV-1/HCV target RNA

• Detection by using a chemiluminescent probe and luminometer *

• The test process takes approximately 3.5 hours.

*An internal control is added to each reaction to control for all steps of the process. If the HIV-1/HCV test is reactive, discriminatory tests are used to differentiate between the two viruses. These tests use the same process as the multiplex assay.

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Procleix validation - Low Viral Load Specimens

•  4 HCV RNA negative blood specimens were spiked with the Hepatitis C Virus (end concetration approx. 130 copies/ml).

• Tested using the Chiron Procleix HIV-1/HCV Assay and the Roche Diagnostics AMPLICOR HCV Test, version 2.0.

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Results

Day Tested % Of Samples that Tested Reactive/Positive

Procleix HIV-1/HCV Assay AMPLICOR Assay

Day 1 100% (4/4) 100% (1/1)

Day 2 100% (4/4) 50% (4/4)

Day 3 100% (3/3) 50% (2/4)

Day 4 75% (3/4) 50% (2/4)

Day 5 100% (4/4) 50% (2/4)

Day 6 75% (3/4) 25% (1/4)

Day 7 100% (4/4) 75% (3/4)

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The longitudinal performance of EQC specimens

0.00

10.00

20.00

30.00

9/1 9/15 9/29 10/13 10/27 11/10 11/24

S/C

O r

atio

mean ± SD signal to cutoff (S/CO) ratios:

HIV 18.7 ± 6.6

HCV 9.5 ± 5.0

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NAT Routine QA and contamination prevention – NIT experience

• All technician trained by the manufacturer or manufacturer’s approved trainer, regular retraining

• Laboratory area arranged with a uni-directional workflow

• Negative air pressure in the NAT lab’s rooms

• Monthly swabbing to identify possible contaminated areas before they become a major problem in the lab and spread into other areas

• Randomly placed negative specimens in the reaction racks

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Procleix HIV-1/HCV Assay Protocol

Thaw Reagents(RT)

Reagent AliquotSample PipettingwTCR Pipetting

RNA Release incubation(60°C)

30 min 20±1 min

Solid Phase Capture(RT)

14-20 min

Target Capture Process (TCS)

9-20 min

1st Wash

4-10 min

2st Wash

4-10 min

Amp I(60°C)

Amp II(41.5°C)

10±1 min9-20 min

Amp III (41.5°C)

60±5 min

HPA(60°C)

15±1 min

Selection(60°C)

10±1 min

Cooling Step(RT)

10 min

READ

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Logistics of NAT Testing

• All specimens are tested individually unless arrived within 2 hrs of each other – NO batching for most specimens

• Run starts as soon as the lab is notified about incoming specimens – time savings of ~ 0.5-1 hr

• All specimens are tested undiluted and diluted - to prevent NAT inhibitors

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Summary of NAT testing at the NIT

Laboratory since 9/2004 • We performed 2943 Procleix runs testing 3655

donors

• 0.8% gave false positives NAT, all resolved before reporting

• 4.13% of donors were HCV RNA+

• 0.24% of donors were HIV RNA+

• 0.19% of donors were HCV+HIV RNA positive

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Conclusions• NAT is doable in OPO setting!

• Doesn’t affect Lab turnaround time

• It provides additional layer of safety for organ transplant recipients

• Identifies viremic donors

• Contributes to EIA testing confirmation

• Doesn’t result in excessive organ donor rejection

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Why OPOs should run NAT even if is not required at this time?

• To prevent “window” HCV and HIV donations

• To detect “silent” or cryptic HIV/HCV carriers

• “State of the art” in donor testing = the best we can do to prevent transmission

• Because Blood Banks are doing it!

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Thank you for your attention!