• Transfusion · Jan 1990

    When should antibody screening tests be done for recently transfused patients?

    • I A Shulman, J M Nelson, and R Nakayama.
    • Blood Bank and Transfusion Medicine Unit, Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center.
    • Transfusion. 1990 Jan 1; 30 (1): 39-41.

    AbstractThe American Association of Blood Banks (AABB) requires that blood samples used for pretransfusion testing of recently transfused (or pregnant) patients must be obtained within 3 days of scheduled transfusions. This requirement, which became effective in July 1988, amended Standard G2.000 of the AABB, which previously required that pretransfusion testing must be done on blood samples obtained within 2 days of scheduled transfusions. The present study was designed to estimate the risk associated with adopting the amended version of Standard G2.000. Sixty patients who developed significant unexpected alloantibodies after transfusion were studied retrospectively. Thirteen of the 60 patients were found to have newly detectable antibodies within 83 hours of a sample reported to be negative for the new antibody. Had the amended version of Standard G2.000 been in effect, the detection of some of these antibodies might have been delayed up to 24 hours. It was estimated that the implementation of the new AABB requirement at the authors' institution could potentially place about 1 in 3000 transfused patients at risk for an acute or delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction.

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