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Transmission (HCV)

"Clinical Outcomes After Hepatitis C Infection From Contaminated anti-D Immune Globulin."

Published in Hepatitis Weekly, May 24th, 1999

According to the author's abstract of an article published in New England Journal of Medicine, "Background and Methods: In February 1994, batches of anti-D immune globulin used in Ireland during 1977 and 1978 to prevent Rh isoimmunization were found to be contaminated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) from a single infected donor. In March 1994, a national screening program was initiated for all women who had received anti-D immune globulin between 1970 and 1994. Of the 62,667 women who had been screened when this study began, 704 (1.1 percent) had evidence of past or current HCV infection, and 390 of those 704 (55 percent) had positive tests for serum HCV RNA on...

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