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Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (iCJD)
Overview
Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (iCJD) is a rare form of CJD transmitted through accidental exposure to prion-contaminated biological materials or medical devices. It represents the first demonstrated example of医源性 (iatrogenic) transmission of a prion disease in humans and has significantly influenced medical safety protocols for tissue banking, surgery, and blood product handling. iCJD accounts for approximately 1-2% of all CJD cases worldwide. [@human]
Historical Context
First Recognized Cases
The first recognized cases of iCJD were reported in 1974, resulting from corneal transplantation from an infected donor [1]. Subsequently, additional cases have been linked to: [@iatrogenic]
Dura mater grafts (1970s-1980s): Largest single source of iCJD
Human growth hormone (1959-1985): Contaminated pituitary extracts
Human pituitary gonadotropin (1960s-1970s)
Blood products (rare, debated)
Neurosurgical instruments (extremely rare)
Impact on Medical Practice
The recognition of iCJD has led to: [@creutzfeldtjakob2024]
Stringent decontamination protocols for surgical instruments
Donor screening policies for tissue and organ transplantation
Blood donor deferral policies
Development of prion-resistant medical devices [2]
Epidemiology
Case Distribution by Exposure Type
...
Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (iCJD)
Overview
Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (iCJD) is a rare form of CJD transmitted through accidental exposure to prion-contaminated biological materials or medical devices. It represents the first demonstrated example of医源性 (iatrogenic) transmission of a prion disease in humans and has significantly influenced medical safety protocols for tissue banking, surgery, and blood product handling. iCJD accounts for approximately 1-2% of all CJD cases worldwide. [@human]
Historical Context
First Recognized Cases
The first recognized cases of iCJD were reported in 1974, resulting from corneal transplantation from an infected donor [1]. Subsequently, additional cases have been linked to: [@iatrogenic]
Dura mater grafts (1970s-1980s): Largest single source of iCJD
Human growth hormone (1959-1985): Contaminated pituitary extracts
Human pituitary gonadotropin (1960s-1970s)
Blood products (rare, debated)
Neurosurgical instruments (extremely rare)
Impact on Medical Practice
The recognition of iCJD has led to: [@creutzfeldtjakob2024]
Stringent decontamination protocols for surgical instruments
Donor screening policies for tissue and organ transplantation
Blood donor deferral policies
Development of prion-resistant medical devices [2]
Incubation period: 1-30 years (exposure-dependent)
Age at onset: Variable (30-70 years)
Outcome: Uniformly fatal
Predictors: Age at onset, codon 129 genotype, exposure type
Public Health Implications
Surveillance
Mandatory reporting of suspected iCJD
International surveillance networks
Investigation of each suspected case
Tracking of exposure sources
Risk Assessment
Estimated risk from blood products: Very low (~1 in 2-3 million)
Risk from surgical instruments: Extremely low with proper decontamination
Risk from tissue transplantation: Mitigated by screening
Future Concerns
Long incubation periods may lead to additional cases
Subclinical carriers possible
Need for continued vigilance
Development of sensitive detection methods [9]
Conclusion
Iatrogenic CJD represents a significant chapter in the history of prion disease research, demonstrating that human prion diseases can be transmitted through medical procedures. While rare, iCJD has profoundly influenced medical safety practices and continues to inform policies around tissue banking, surgical instrument decontamination, and blood product safety. The prevention of iCJD through stringent safety protocols remains a model for addressing emerging infectious risks in medicine.
This section highlights recent publications relevant to this disease.
[Human Prion Disease: Pathogenesis, Diagnosis and Public Health.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41754559/) (2026 Feb 6) - Viruses
[Iatrogenic cerebral amyloid angiopathy: more cases to come.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41473224/) (2025) - Frontiers in neurology
[Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease surveillance in Australia: update to 31 December 2024.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41118651/) (2025 Oct 22) - Communicable diseases intelligence (2018)
[First Endoscopic Transplantation of a Tympanic Allograft: A Case Report.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40690305/) (2025 Jul 21) - The Journal of craniofacial surgery
[Selecting Substitutes for Cranial Dural Repair and Preventing Intracranial Iatrogenic Amyloid Transmission.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40693052/) (2025 Jun) - Cureus