Prion-associated diseases - Tissue - Live Donors
Essential information
- Includes
Sporadic, Familial and Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), Gerstmann-Strãussler-Scheinker Disease, Fatal Familial Insomnia.
- Obligatory
Must not donate if:
- Diagnosed with any form of CJD, or other human prion disease.
- Identified at increased risk of developing a prion associated disorder. This includes:
- Individuals at familial risk of prion-associated diseases (have had two or more blood relatives develop a prion-associated disease or have been informed following genetic counselling they are at risk).
- Individuals who have been told that they have been put at increased risk from surgery, transfusion or transplant of tissues or organs.
- Individuals who have been told that they may be at increased risk because a recipient of blood or tissues that they have donated has developed a prion related disorder.
- Recipients of dura mater grafts.
- Recipients of corneal, scleral or other ocular tissue grafts.
- Recipients of human pituitary derived extracts.
- Since 01 January 1980:
Recipients of any allogeneic human tissue.
- Discretionary
If the donor has had two or more blood relatives develop a prion-associated disease and, following genetic counselling, they have been informed that they are not at risk, accept.
This requires confirmation by a Designated Medical Officer.
Supporting information
- Additional information
A Position Statement on Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease is available.
- Reason for change:
- To reflect guidance from the Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Blood Tissues and Organs. There is the same concern over a possible second wave of cases of vCJD from accepting donors who have received tissue or organ transplants, as there is over donors who have been previously transfused.
- Version details:
TL-DSG Edition 203 Release 23 (18 January 2016)