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Up to 21‐day banked red blood cells collected by apheresis and stored for 14 days after automated wash at different times of storage
Author(s) -
Grabmer C.,
Holmberg J.,
Popovsky M.,
Amann E.,
Schönitzer D.,
Falaize S.,
Hanske H.,
Pages E.,
Nussbaumer W.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
vox sanguinis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.68
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1423-0410
pISSN - 0042-9007
DOI - 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2005.00719.x
Subject(s) - haemolysis , apheresis , potassium , chemistry , blood preservation , hemolysis , red blood cell , andrology , biochemistry , medicine , immunology , platelet , organic chemistry
Background and Objectives A closed‐system technology (ACP‐215, Haemonetics, Braintree, MA) enables automated washing and extended storage of frozen red blood cells (RBC). This technology was applied to wash banked RBC for removal of undesirable protein and metabolites before transfusion. We studied protein and metabolite depletion as well as RBC metabolism and viability up to 14 days postwash with regard to various pre‐storage times. Materials and Methods Thirty RBC units were collected by means of apheresis and subdivided into three arms based on prewash storage time period (6 days/group 1, 14 days/group 2, 21 days/group 3). Wash efficacy (protein depletion, IgA), RBC metabolism (pH, lactate, potassium, haemolysis) and cell viability (ATP) were analysed immediately and 14 days after washing. Results Total protein and IgA postwash were lowered by automated wash in all groups and uniformly met EC guidelines. Potassium (mmol/l) was below 1·2 mmol/l postwash and significantly below prewash values in all groups, even after 14 days of storage (prewash vs. postwash; P < 0·05). RBCs washed after 14 and 21 days, respectively, showed significantly lower pH values and lower ATP content than RBCs washed after only 6 days of storage. Haemolysis rate remained significantly below 0·8%, the maximum level recommended by the EC guidelines, immediately and 14 days after washing in all units. Conclusion Our data confirm that RBC units banked up to 21 days can be effectively protein‐ and potassium‐depleted with the ACP‐215 independent from prewash storage time. With respect to high ATP levels and pH, postwash storage of 2 weeks should be limited to units not older than 7 days before wash. This new washing technology ensures better standardization in washed RBC and provides blood centres with a logistical alternative to 24‐h washed RBC products.