• Transfusion · May 2012

    Conversion to low transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI)-risk plasma significantly reduces TRALI.

    • Suzanne A Arinsburg, Donna L Skerrett, Julie K Karp, Paul M Ness, Jeffrey Jhang, Anand Padmanabhan, Joan Gibble, Joseph Schwartz, Karen E King, and Melissa M Cushing.
    • New York Blood Center and the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical Center, 525 E. 68th Street, New York,NY 10065, USA.
    • Transfusion. 2012 May 1;52(5):946-52.

    BackgroundTransfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is an uncommon but serious transfusion reaction. Studies have shown that the transfusion of HLA and HNA antibodies in donor plasma can lead to TRALI. Female donors are more likely to have such antibodies due to alloantigen exposure during pregnancy. Many blood suppliers have now implemented various TRALI risk reduction strategies to unknown effect. A retrospective analysis of TRALI reactions in plasma recipients before and after the conversion to low-TRALI-risk plasma (all-male donor plasma, male-predominant plasma, nulliparous female plasma, and HLA antibody-tested plasma) is reported.Study Design And MethodsTransfusion reaction reports at three large hospitals 16 months before and 16 months after the conversion to low-TRALI-risk plasma were analyzed. Respiratory reactions were categorized as TRALI, possible TRALI, or other (e.g., transfusion-associated circulatory overload or allergic reactions). Reactions were reported as a percentage of total units transfused and rates for the two time periods were compared. Trends in reaction rates for other components were also compared.ResultsA total of 2156 transfusion reactions in association with 461,598 transfused blood components were reviewed. The incidence of combined TRALI or possible TRALI reactions, due to the transfusion of plasma, decreased from 0.0084% to zero (p = 0.052). The rate of TRALI or possible TRALI reactions in red blood cell and platelet recipients did not change significantly.ConclusionThe conversion to low-TRALI-risk plasma has reduced the incidence of TRALI reactions in plasma recipients.© 2011 American Association of Blood Banks.

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