Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease at the millennium

Paul Brown(National Institutes of Health), Michael Preece(National Institutes of Health), J.-P. Brandel(National Institutes of Health), Takeshi Sato(National Institutes of Health), Lisa M. McShane(National Institutes of Health), Inga Zerr(National Institutes of Health), A Fletcher(National Institutes of Health), Robert Will(National Institutes of Health), Maurizio Pocchiari(National Institutes of Health), Neil R. Cashman(National Institutes of Health), Jérôme Huillard d’Aignaux(National Institutes of Health), L. Cervenáková(National Institutes of Health), Judith Fradkin(National Institutes of Health), Lawrence B. Schonberger(National Institutes of Health), Steven Collins(National Institutes of Health)
Neurology
October 24, 2000
Cited by 526

Abstract

The causes and geographic distribution of 267 cases of iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) are here updated at the millennium. Small numbers of still-occurring cases result from disease onsets after longer and longer incubation periods following infection by cadaveric human growth hormone or dura mater grafts manufactured and distributed before the mid-1980s. The proportion of recipients acquiring CJD from growth hormone varies from 0.3 to 4.4% in different countries, and acquisition from dura mater varies between 0.02 and 0.05% in Japan (where most cases occurred). Incubation periods can extend up to 30 years, and cerebellar onsets predominate in both hormone and graft recipients (in whom the site of graft placement had no effect on the clinical presentation). Homozygosity at codon 129 of the PRNP gene is over-represented in both forms of disease; it has no effect on the incubation period of graft recipients, but may promote shorter incubation periods in hormone cases. Knowledge about potential high-risk sources of contamination gained during the last quarter century, and the implementation of methods to circumvent them, should minimize the potential for iatrogenic contributions to the current spectrum of CJD.


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