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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A multicenter prospective study was carried out to evaluate whether a vapor-heated factor VIII concentrate transmitted blood-borne viral infections over a surveillance period of 15 months. Thirty-five patients with hemophilia and
von Willebrand disease
who had never received any blood components were treated. Twenty-eight were analyzed and found not to have non-A, non-B hepatitis. Sera from 20 of these 28 patients were also tested for the antibody to the hepatitis C virus. None had sero-converted during the follow-up period. None of the patients analyzed developed markers of the hepatitis B virus (n = 17) or the human
immunodeficiency
virus (n = 31). This vapor-heated factor VIII concentrate carries a low risk of transmitting hepatitis and human immunodeficiency virus infection.
...
PMID:Low risk of viral infection after administration of vapor-heated factor VIII concentrate. International Investigator Group. 131 76
From January 1, 1981 through June 30, 1990, 32 females with chronic bleeding disorders were diagnosed with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the United States. Most (81.3%) were white and greater than or equal to 30 years of age, with a median age of 37.5 years. Eighteen (56.3%) had
von Willebrand's disease
. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia was reported for 16 (50%). None had Kaposi sarcoma. The median survival time was 10.8 months, with a cumulative probability of survival at 1 year of 47.3% and at 2 years of 27.6%. We compared the demographic data and survival times of these females with those of males with a chronic bleeding disorder and AIDS, and with those of nonhemophilic females with AIDS whose exposure to the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) was through receipt of blood transfusions, blood components, or tissue. The principal demographic difference was age distribution. The females with chronic bleeding disorders tended to be younger than the transfused, nonhemophilic females, but older than the males. The survival time from AIDS diagnosis to death for the females with chronic bleeding disorders did not differ statistically from that of the other two groups, although older nonhemophilic females whose exposure was transfusion may progress more rapidly to AIDS.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of AIDS in females with hemophilia and other chronic bleeding disorders in the United States: comparisons with males with chronic bleeding disorders and AIDS and with nonhemophilic female blood-transfusion recipients with AIDS. 150 95
Human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and hepatitis virus B or C (HBV, HCV) transmission are major risks following infusion of coagulation factor concentrates. Thus, several methods have been used to achieve viral inactivation of concentrates prepared from plasma collected from a large number of donors. In this study, 32 patients with haemophilia A or B (n = 31) or
von Willebrand's disease
(n = 1) were treated between 1987 and 1990 only with factor VIII or IX concentrates inactivated by the solvent-detergent procedure. During this period, none of these cases exhibited elevated liver enzymes (alanine amino transferase), and serological tests for HIV, HBV and HCV infections always remained negative. This suggests that the solvent-detergent procedure of concentrate inactivation is an efficient method to prevent not only HIV or HBV transmission but also HCV infection in haemophiliacs.
...
PMID:[Efficacy in viral inactivation of the concentrates of factor VIII and IX by the solvent/detergent procedure. Evaluation in patients with hemophilia]. 183 Jun 53
National yearly surveys were carried out between 1985 and 1989 to determine the prevalence of antibodies for human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) in Finnish patients with bleeding disorders. From 192 out of the 214 haemophiliacs (90%) tested, 2 patients were positive for anti-HIV. No seropositivities were found after 1985. Fourteen out of 21 patients (67%) with type III
von Willebrand's disease
, and 7 out of 8 patients (88%) with factor XIII deficiency were tested with negative results. The low prevalence of anti-HIV (0.94%; 2/213 tested), is mainly due to the self-sufficiency for clotting factors, the low prevalence of HIV in the population, and the use of cryoprecipitate during the critical period.
...
PMID:Low prevalence of antibodies against human immunodeficiency virus in Finnish haemophiliacs. 186 39
Two hundred and eighty-two patients with congenital bleeding disorders received blood component replacement therapy between January 1979 and April 1985, were followed-up by the Puget Sound Blood Center's Hemophilia Care Program, and were tested for antibody to human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). Serologic results were obtained at least 1 year after the last exposure to volunteer donor products that were prepared before donor HIV screening or after the last exposure to concentrates produced before the manufacturer's use of treatment methods for inactivation of HIV. In all, 106 patients were anti-HIV positive. The risk of HIV infection was greater in patients with more severe bleeding tendencies, greater exposure to components, and exposure to lyophilized concentrates from large pools of donors. Of 100 patients with hemophilia A who only received cryoprecipitate from volunteer donors from Washington State (during the 6.3-year period), 14% had become anti-HIV positive. Of 27 patients receiving mostly cryoprecipitate but also being exposed to a single lot of concentrate during the same period, 13 (48%) were positive. Of 49 patients treated predominantly or solely with factor VIII concentrates during this period, 43 (88%) were anti-HIV positive. Of 29 patients with
von Willebrand disease
, four were anti-HIV positive, including 2 of 26 receiving only cryoprecipitate and two of three who had received a single dose of factor VIII concentrate. Of 19 patients who were treated solely with volunteer donor plasma, all remained anti-HIV negative. Of 47 patients exposed to factor IX concentrate, 28 (60%) were positive. Data relevant to the risk of HIV transmission subsequent to screening of the volunteer donor population were also obtained. Treatment records of 55 hemophilia A patients who have remained anti-HIV negative through at least June 1990 showed exposure to 71,173 screened donors from May 1985 through December 1989, and all 55 patients have remained anti-HIV negative.
...
PMID:Treatment type and amount influenced human immunodeficiency virus seroprevalence of patients with congenital bleeding disorders. 188 29
As part of a prospective cohort study initiated in 1983, the human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) status has been periodically determined for patients with clotting disorders (hemophilia A or B,
von Willebrand's disease
, miscellaneous). The University of North Carolina Hospitals has conducted comprehensive surveillance for nosocomial infections (NI) using modified Centers for Disease Control criteria since 1980 and entered this information in a computerized data base. Cross-matching of our NI data base and hemophiliac/HIV-1 study data base for the time period 1980-1989 revealed that 13 NI occurred in 11 patients during 659 hospitalizations (5,723 hospital days). NI rates per 100 admissions (per 1,000 hospital days) by HIV-1 status were as follows: HIV-1 negative = 0.91 (1.18), HIV-1 positive pre-AIDS = 1.65 (1.84), and AIDS = 6.67 (6.48). NI occurred with a similar frequency in HIV-1 positive pre-AIDS hemophiliacs and HIV-1 negative hemophiliacs (Fisher's exact test, p greater than 0.10). However, NI occurred more frequently in hemophiliacs with AIDS versus HIV-1 positive or negative hemophiliacs (Fisher's exact test, p less than 0.05). We conclude that HIV-1 infection does not appreciably alter the risk of developing a NI, but that patients who have progressed to AIDS are at significantly increased risk of developing a NI per hospital day or per hospitalization.
...
PMID:Nosocomial infection rate as a function of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 status in hemophiliacs. 192 66
The physiologic mechanisms that influence plasma levels of von Willebrand factor (vWF) are poorly understood but include race, blood group, age, pregnancy, exercise, and adrenergic and neurohumoral stimuli. Inherited abnormalities in
von Willebrand's disease
(vWD) are associated with a defect of the vWF gene on chromosome 12, but in some cases, coexistence of impaired response of plasminogen activator and telangiectasia suggests the presence of a regulatory defect or more extensive endothelial perturbation. Three broad types of vWD are recognized; in addition, a platelet-type vWD (pseudo-vWD) is due to an abnormal platelet receptor for vWF. The prevalence of vWD, which is difficult to determine because of variations in severity even within a kindred, is reportedly as high as 1%. In a survey of European patients, the prevalence of treated vWD varied from 4.5 to 24 per million. Preliminary results of an international survey of vWD indicate that about 3% of treated patients have seroconversion to human
immunodeficiency
virus, 50% of whom have symptoms. Inhibitor of vWF occurs in type III vWD after treatment and is associated with the presence of gene deletions. Acquired vWD may complicate lymphoproliferative and autoimmune disorders, and proteolytic degradation of vWF complicates myeloproliferative disorders. The level of vWF is increased during pregnancy and in vascular and other disorders; it may be involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. High-molecular-weight multimers of vWF and a cofactor are thought to promote the formation of microthrombi in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and the hemolytic uremic syndrome. Thus, study of vWD has shed light on pathogenetic mechanisms in a wide range of disorders.
...
PMID:von Willebrand factor: clinical features of inherited and acquired disorders. 207 62
Manufacturers are attempting to increase the purity of FVIII concentrates. A strategy pursued by some is that of including a purification step (gel filtration, ion-exchange or affinity chromatography) that yields concentrates with an intermediate or final specific activity of 35 to 250 IU FVIII/mg of protein. The specific activity of the final product may be lower because serum albumin is added to some concentrates to stabilize FVIII. In hemophiliacs treated with these concentrates, FVIII recovery and half-life are at least as good as those for less pure concentrates. In patients with
von Willebrand disease
, these concentrates increase plasma levels of FVIII, but their capacity to normalize the bleeding time is not well established. The hypothesis that their reduced alloantigen load might slow the progression of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection is still not validated, but a few prospective studies are now attempting to address this issue. All the concentrates undergo virucidal procedures based on pasteurization or treatment with solvent/detergent. It is well established that these virucidal methods and donor screening avoid HIV transmission. A recent large study has shown that a pasteurized concentrate carries a low risk of transmitting viral hepatitis. The assessment of safety from hepatitis of concentrates treated with solvent/detergent is based on favorable preliminary results.
...
PMID:High-purity factor VIII concentrates produced without using monoclonal antibodies. 212 70
Various immunological parameters were studied in 20 asymptomatic patients with hemophilia A, 3 patients with hemophilia B and 1 patient with
von Willebrand disease
. Patients were treated with cryoprecipitate or fresh frozen plasma. Significantly decreased mean percentage and absolute count (p less than 0.01) of peripheral blood E-rosette-forming cells compared to controls was found. There were normal mean percentages and absolute counts of lymphocytes, T-helper inducer, T-suppressor cytotoxic and natural killer cells. The proportion and absolute number of B cells was slightly increased. Significantly decreased natural killer cell activity (p = 0.02) of peripheral blood lymphocytes was observed. Our results indicate that asymptomatic patients with hemophilia may have early evidence of
immunodeficiency
.
...
PMID:Immunologic studies in asymptomatic hemophiliac patients. 243 38
Patients with hemophilia A or
von Willebrand's disease
who are treated with concentrated preparations of human factor VIII made from unscreened pooled plasma are at substantial risk of contracting human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether by treating such patients with a pasteurized factor VIII concentrate that had been heated in aqueous solution at 60 degrees C for 10 hours, HIV infection could be avoided. Eleven hemophilia centers in the Federal Republic of Germany and two in Austria identified 155 eligible patients who had been treated exclusively with pasteurized factor VIII concentrate and had not received any other blood products. Between February 1979 and December 1986 they received a total of 15,916,260 IU of pasteurized factor VIII. The United States was the source of 80 percent of the plasma from which the concentrate was made. By September 1988, these 155 patients had been screened for antibody to HIV type 1 (anti-HIV-1) with a total of 657 tests; all were negative. Sixty-seven patients were also tested once for antibody to HIV type 2 (anti-HIV-2); all these tests were negative as well. It appears that pasteurization effectively inactivates HIV, even in plasma that is likely to be highly contaminated with the virus.
...
PMID:Absence of anti-human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 seroconversion after the treatment of hemophilia A or von Willebrand's disease with pasteurized factor VIII concentrate. 250 17
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