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A preliminary comparison of the prevalence of transfusion reactions in recipients of platelet components from donors with and without human leucocyte antigen antibodies
Author(s) -
Fadeyi E. A.,
Adams S.,
Sheldon S.,
Leitman S. F.,
Wesley R.,
Klein H. G.,
Stroncek D. F.
Publication year - 2008
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.1423-0410.2008.01041.x
Subject(s) - apheresis , medicine , antibody , human leukocyte antigen , immunology , platelet , transfusion related acute lung injury , antigen , isoantibodies , platelet transfusion , blood transfusion , retrospective cohort study , lung , pulmonary edema
Background  Human leucocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies have been implicated in transfusion‐related acute lung injury, but the probability that the transfusion of a blood component containing HLA antibodies will cause a reaction is not known. This study compared the prevalence of reactions associated with the transfusion of platelet components with and without HLA antibodies. Study Design and Methods  This retrospective study tested 96 consecutive apheresis platelet donors for HLA class I and II antibodies. Matched control donors without HLA antibodies were selected and records were reviewed to determine the proportion of components from each group that caused reactions. In addition, all apheresis platelet donors involved with two or more reactions were identified and tested for HLA class I antibodies. Results  Five of the 96 donors had antibodies to class I or class II antigens and, of these, four had components transfused. The prevalence of reactions to components from these four donors with HLA antibodies and the 12 matched control donors without antibodies was similar (three reactions to 167 transfusions or 1·8% vs. three to 295 or 1·0%, respectively, P  = 0·32). A retrospective review of the transfusion records from all platelet donors found that components from 22 caused two or more reactions and three (13·6%) had antibodies to HLA class I compared to 4·2% of the consecutively selected donors ( P  = 0·12). None of the patients experienced transfusion‐related acute lung injury. Conclusion  Reactions associated with transfusion of apheresis platelets containing HLA antibodies are unusual.

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