Serious Hazards of Transfusion: DR Kenneth S Charles MB - Bs (Uwi), FRCP (Uk), Frcpath (Uk) Senior Lecturer in Haematology
Serious Hazards of Transfusion: DR Kenneth S Charles MB - Bs (Uwi), FRCP (Uk), Frcpath (Uk) Senior Lecturer in Haematology
Serious Hazards of Transfusion: DR Kenneth S Charles MB - Bs (Uwi), FRCP (Uk), Frcpath (Uk) Senior Lecturer in Haematology
Dr Kenneth S Charles
MB.BS (UWI), FRCP (UK), FRCPath(UK)
Senior Lecturer in Haematology
Introduction
Case study
Definition of adverse effect
Classification
Pathophysiology
Management
Prevention
Cryoprecipitate
Platelet concentrate
Fresh frozen
plasma
Case study
Adverse reaction
Any untoward event occurring within a few
hours, weeks or months of and as a direct
result of administration of a blood
component
Classification
Immediate/Delayed
Infectious/Non-infectious
Immune/Non-immune
Clinical presentation
FEBRILE
AHFTR contd
Abs in recipients serum activate
complement to initiate intravascular lysis
Catecholamines and kinins released
DIC in 30-50%
Fever, chills, nausea, pain at IV site,
chest and back pains (intravascular
occlusion by agglutinated red
cells),hypotension, dark urine
Nephrotoxic effects of anti-red cell stroma
AHFTR
Stop transfusion
IV hydration - Normal Saline to systolic BP
> 100 mmHg, UO > 100 ml/hr
Diuresis - +/- IV Frusemide or mannitol
Appropriate samples to blood bench
Clinically occult
Occur 2-21 days after transfusion
1 in 500 transfusions
Death rare
Anti- Kell, Duffy, Kidd, Rhesus in patients
sensitized by transfusion, pregnancy
Low grade fever, jaundice, no rise in Hb, positive
DCT, spherocytes
Acute Renal Failure rare. Most self-limiting
Bacterial contamination
Especially platelet concentrate
Sources donor bacteraemia, donor arm,
contamination during processing
Fever, chills, shock, ARF, DIC
G- and G+ bacteria
Mortality 26%
Domestic refrigerator
Returned to Blood
Bench
25
DYSPNOEIC
Non-haemolytic febrile
transfusion reactions (NHFTR)
Most common type of transfusion reaction
Granulocyte and HLA-specific
antileucocyte Abs develop in recipient by
pregnancy, previous transfusion
Lysis of donor WBCs and release of
cytokines
1 in 200-500 transfusions
Leucocyte antigens
HLA Class I and II
Neutrophil specific antigens NA-1, NA-2,
NB
HLA Antigens
TRALI
TRALI
TRALI
Anaphylaxis
Hereditary IgA deficiency 1 in 700 in USA
Complement-fixing IgG anti-IgA through
pregnancy or transfusion
Dyspnoea, chest pain, nausea, abdo
cramps, hypotension
IV epinephrine, methylprednisolone
Washed red cells, IgA deficient donors
URTICARIAL
Urticaria
OTHER
Estimated frequency
Hepatitis A
1 in 1 000 000
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
HIV
HTLV1
HIV, HBsAg
Syphilis,
HCV
HTLV1, Chagas
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
Voluntary
WHO,2002
Replacement
Paid
Sample HIV
(no)
HBsAg
HTLV1
HCV
TP
Chagas
2000
14 882 0.19
0.83
0.94
0.37
0.55
ND
2004
13742
0.58
1.46
0.77
2.16
0.05
0.21
NUMBER
95
165
20000
15000
95
78
66
18055
19589
1551
1322
19209
19867
2707
2908
AUTOLOGOUS
REPLACEMENT
VOLUNTARY
10000
11275
11817
1866
1808
5000
0
2004
2005
2006
2007
YEAR
2008
2009
1.46
1.4
Percentage
1.2
1
T&T
UK
0.77
0.8
0.58
0.6
0.4
0.21
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.004
0.005
0
HIV
HBsAg
HCV
HTLV1
TTIs 2009
HIV
HBV
HCV
SYPH
HTLV
CHAGAS
ALL
REPLACEMENT
43(0.21)
68(0.33)
41(0.20)
275(1.3)
195(0.97)
11(0.05)
633(3.2)
VOLUNTARY
3(0.14)
1(0.05)
5(0.23)
5(0.23)
14(0.64)
0(0)
28(1.3)
Voluntary donor %
HIV in donors
%
1.2
1
0.8
JAM
0.6
TRT
0.4
CUR
0.2
0
2005
HBsAg in donors %
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
2007
HCV in donors
%
BAR
JAM
TRT
CUR
2006
2008
2009
Window period/days
Virus
ELISA
NAT (PCR)
HCV
88
23
HBV
56
31
HIV
22
12
Donation rate
% TTI markers
Jamaica
83.6
5.0
104.4
4.69
Curacao
368.6
0.03
Iron overload
Case study
Case study
TRALI
IPPV
Later succumbed to malignancy
Female donor anti NA-1 Abs
Summary
Case study
Definition of adverse effect
Classification
Pathophysiology
Management
Prevention