Rm. Selik et al., TRENDS IN TRANSFUSION-ASSOCIATED ACQUIRED-IMMUNE-DEFICIENCY-SYNDROME IN THE UNITED-STATES, 1982 THROUGH 1991, Transfusion, 33(11), 1993, pp. 890-893
To evaluate the efficacy of measures for preventing the transmission o
f human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) by blood transfusion, trends in t
ransfusion-associated cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AI
DS) reported through June 1992 were analyzed. By year of transfusion,
cases rose from 56 in 1978 to 714 in 1984, dropped sharply to 288 in 1
985 when screening of donated blood for HIV antibody began, and fell b
elow 20 per year from 1986 through 1991. Reinvestigation of a sample o
f cases suggested that only one-fourth of those attributed in the tren
ds analysis to post-1985 United States transfusions actually were due
to that source. By year of AIDS diagnosis, cases climbed from 14 in 19
82 to 824 in 1987 and subsequently remained relatively level. Of cases
diagnosed in 1991 with known transfusion dates, almost all resulted f
rom transfusions received before 1986. Cases in persons aged greater t
han or equal to 65 years at diagnosis fell steeply after 1987, while t
hose in persons aged 45 to 64 years leveled and those in persons aged
25 to 44 years continued to increase; this caused the median age to de
crease from 59 in 1986 to 47 in 1991. Thus, screening and other measur
es have almost completely prevented transmission, but, because of infe
ctions acquired before screening began, many cases continue to be diag
nosed among increasingly younger persons.