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Laboratory abnormalities in former blood donors seropositive for human T-lymphotropic virus types 1 and 2: a prospective analysis.

Glynn SA,Murphy EL,Wright DJ,Sacher RA,Fridey J,Schreiber GB

Abstract

The human T-lymphotropic viruses types 1 and 2 (HTLV-1 and HTLV-2) are highly prevalent among injection drug users in the United States. However, the clinical course of infection has not been well characterized.
To understand HTLV-1-and HTLV-2-associated laboratory abnormalities, which may provide insights into their underlying pathophysiology.
Cohort study.
Five US blood centers.
A total of 133 HTLV-1-and 332 HTLV-2-seropositive former blood donors and 717 HTLV-seronegative donors followed up prospectively since 1991.
Selected serum chemistry tests and complete blood cell counts were analyzed at enrollment and approximately 2 years later in participants. Repeated-measures analyses were conducted to evaluate the effect of HTLV infection on laboratory measures.
Compared with seronegative subjects, HTLV-1-seropositive subjects had 13% higher creatine kinase (P =.02) and slightly elevated lactate dehydrogenase (P =.03) levels at follow-up. The HTLV-2-seropositive participants had 11% higher absolute lymphocyte counts than seronegative subjects (P =.0001). Infection with HTLV-2 also appeared to be associated with slightly higher hemoglobin levels (P =.03) and hematocrit (P =.03) and with lower albumin levels (P =.01).
These results further our understanding of the biological mechanisms underlying HTLV and suggest that HTLV-associated laboratory changes are unlikely to alter clinical evaluation or counseling of otherwise healthy HTLV-infected subjects.

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