ARTICLE
International review of blood donation nucleic acid amplification testing
- Vox Sanguinis , 119 : 315-325
Lien de l'article :
https://doi.org/10.1111/vox.13592
Discipline :
Sciences biologiques
Auteur(s) :
Helen M. Faddy, Carla Osiowy, Brian Custer, Michael P. Busch, Susan L. Stramer, Opeyemi Adesina, Thijs van de Laar, Wai‐Chiu Tsoi, Claire E. Styles, Phil Kiely, Angelo R. Margaritis, So‐Yong Kwon, Yan Qiu, Xuelian Deng, Antoine Lewin, Signe Winther Jørgensen, Christian Erikstrup, David Juhl, Sílvia Sauleda, Bernardo Camacho, Lisbeth Jennifer Catherine Soto Coral, Paula Andrea Gaviria García, Sineenart Oota, Sheila F. O’Brien, Silvano Wendel, Emma Castro, Laura Navarro, Heli Harvala, Katy Davison, Claire Reynolds, Lisa Jarvis, Piotr Grabarczyk, Aneta Kopacz, Magdalena Łętowska, Niamh O’Flaherty, Fiona Young, Pádraig Williams, Lisa Burke, Sze Sze Chua, An Muylaert, Isabel Page, Ann Jones, Christoph Niederhauser, Marion Vermeulen, Syria Laperche, Pierre Gallian, Salam Sawadogo, Masahiro Satake, Ahmad Gharehbaghian, Marcelo Addas‐Carvalho, Sebastián Blanco, Sandra Gallego, Axel Seltsam, Marijke Weber‐Schehl, Arwa Z. Al‐Riyami, Khuloud Al Maamari, Fatma Ba Alawi, Hem Chandra Pandey, Dora Mbanya, Rochele Azevedo França, Richard Charlewood, the Virology and Surveillance; Risk Assessment and Policy subgroups of the ISBT Working Party on Transfusion‐transmitted Infectious Diseases
Auteur(s) tagués :
SAWADOGO Salam
Renseignée par : SAWADOGO Salam
Résumé
This survey captures current use of blood donation NAT globally. There has been increased NAT usage over the last decade. It is clear that NAT contributes to improving blood transfusion safety globally; however, there is a need to overcome economic barriers for regions/countries not performing NAT.
Mots-clés
Nucleic acid, Blood donor, Donation, Medicine, Biology, Genetics, Immunology, Political science, Law