JPAC Joint United Kingdom (UK) Blood Transfusion and Tissue Transplantation Services Professional Advisory Committee

Hepatitis C

1. Person with current Hepatitis C infection
Obligatory

Must not donate.

See if Relevant

Blood Safety Entry

Additional Information

Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a serious infection that can lead to chronic liver disease, liver cancer (hepatoma) and chronic fatigue syndrome. It has also been linked with malignant lymphomas and autoimmune disease. The infection is very easily spread by transfusion.

Individuals who are chronically infected are sometimes referred to as 'carriers'. They often have no, or minimal, symptoms associated with their infection.

Many cases are linked to previous drug use and, before the introduction of HCV screening of blood donations, to transfusion.

Reason for change

See below

2. Person with treated Hepatitis C infection
Includes

Individuals who have received successful treatment for HCV.

Obligatory

Must not donate.

Discretionary

If six months has elapsed from the completion of therapy and the individual has been told their treatment has cleared their HCV infection, accept.
Samples should be taken to confirm that the donor is HCV antibody negative before a full donation is taken.

See if Relevant

Blood Safety Entry

Additional Information

Individuals who have been successfully treated will usually remain HCV antibody positive for many years. As a negative HCV antibody screening test is required before blood can be issued, their blood cannot be used.

Reason for change

See below

3. Current or Former Sexual Partner of Affected Individual
Obligatory

Must not donate if
Less than three months from the last sexual contact.
 

Discretionary

Donors who have a current sexual partner with a history of previous HCV infection may be able to donate, depending on the status of their partner:.

1. If the partner has been treated for HCV infection, and has been free of therapy for six months, and is in sustained remission, accept.

2. If the partner has evidence of previous HCV infection (HCV RNA negative, anti-HCV positive), and has been fully assessed by an appropriate clinician who has confirmed that there is no current HCV infection, accept.
 

See if Relevant

Blood Safety Leaflet 

Additional Information

Confirmation of the success of treatment of the HCV positive partner is not required.

Individuals who remain HCV RNA negative six months after completing treatment are likely to have been ‘cured’, with a risk of relapse of less than 1%

In the United Kingdom the risk of sexual transmission of HCV from an infected individual to a sexual partner is low, but not zero.

As the treated individual would have a very low (<1%) risk of relapse of infection and sexual transmission of the hepatitis C virus is rare, the transmission of hepatitis C from a successfully treated individual to a sexual partner is most unlikely.

All donations in the UK undergo HCV NAT screening so that the chance of a window period donation escaping detection is also exceedingly low (estimated residual risk for HCV transmission from a UK blood donation for 2014-2016 is 1 in 95.8 million donations).

 

Sexual Partners of anti-HCV positive, PCR negative donors
Individuals who have cleared an acute HCV infection naturally are sometimes identified through HCV testing, including testing of a blood donation. Such individuals will be HCV RNA negative but HCV antibody positive. Unlike people who have been treated for HCV infection, they may not have received appropriate clinical follow up, including repeat HCV RNA testing several months after the original negative result. Unless the individual has undergone specialist assessment and been given the assurance that they are not currently infected, their partner is not eligible to donate.

Reason for change

See below

4. Person Currently or Formerly Sharing a Home with an Affected Individual
Discretionary

Accept.

See if Relevant

Current or Former Sexual Partner of Affected Individual, above.  

Additional Information

Hepatitis C is neither contagious nor spread by the faecal-oral route. It is usually only spread through a direct blood to blood route. For these reasons household contacts do not need to be deferred.

Reason for change

See below

Reason for change

This entry was updated to remove the reference to a separate entry for Northern Ireland. This is to reflect changes in donor selection criteria for donors in Northern Ireland (1st June 2020) which are in line with the other UK Blood Services and the SaBTO Donor Selection Criteria Review Report (2017).

Donor Information

If you wish to obtain more information regarding a personal medical issue please contact your National Help Line.

Please do not contact this web site for personal medical queries, as we are not in a position to provide individual answers.

Update Information

This entry was last updated in:
DSG-WB Edition 203, Release 50