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Original Articles

Expert Elicitation for the Judgment of Prion Disease Risk Uncertainties

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Pages 261-285 | Published online: 06 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

There is a high level of uncertainty surrounding the potential for iatrogenic prion transmission through transplantation, medical instrument reuse, blood transfusion, and blood product use due to a lack of evidence-based research on this important risk issue. A group of specialists was enlisted to evaluate some of the knowledge gaps in this area using the “Classical Model,” a structured elicitation procedure for weighting and pooling expert judgment. The elicitation exercise was undertaken in March 2009 with 11 transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) experts who were first calibrated using a series of seed questions for which the answers are known; they were then asked to answer a number of target questions that are important for risk assessment purposes, but for which there remains high uncertainty at this time. The target questions focused on variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (vCJD) prevalence, incubation times for vCJD, genetic susceptibility to prion disease, blood infectivity, prion reduction of blood and blood products, surgical instrument risks, and interspecies transmission of TSEs. The experts were also asked to perform pairwise risk rankings for 12 different potential routes of infection. Dura mater transplantation was seen as having the highest risk, while dental tissue grafts were viewed as presenting the lowest risk of iatrogenic transmission. The structured elicitation procedure provides a rational, auditable, and repeatable basis for obtaining useful information on prion disease risk issues, for which data are sparse.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by PrioNet Canada, a Network of Centres of Excellence established by under the Canadian Networks of Centres of Excellence program. The following individuals participated in the expert elicitation exercise: Steve Anderson, David Asher, Herbert Budka, Neil Cashman, Albert Farrugia, Tini Garske, James Hope, Ron Rogers, Robert Rohwer, Robert Will, and Shimian Zhou. We thank Jun Wu and Caroline Desjardins from the Public Health Agency of Canada for their ongoing support of this work. Oswaldo Morales N from Delft TU assisted in the collation of the data and the generation of the initial EXCALIBUR results of the anonymized responses for reevaluation by the expert group.

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