Friday, June 25, 2010

Filtering donor blood cuts cardiac risk, lung complications

Washington, June 22 (ANI): Scientists have found another reason to filter the foreign white cells from donor blood-it dramatically reduces cardiopulmonary complications for patients who received a transfusion.
The study by researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC), is the latest in a large body of work led by Dr. Neil Blumberg, who for 25 years has been investigating the benefits of filtering or washing blood to create safer, simpler approaches to transfusion therapy.
The observational study was conducted during the seven years before and after 2000, when the URMC introduced universal leukoreduction, a process that filters the white cells from blood to be used for transfusions.
Researchers looked at the number of reports of transfusion reactions during the 14-year period, and divided them by the total number of blood components transfused (778, 559).
Rates of acute, transfusion-related lung injury dropped 83 percent in the years after filtering took place, and transfusion-associated circulatory overload declined 49 percent, when compared to the rates prior to the year 2000.
Both conditions are rare, but are among the most common causes of death following a transfusion.
"These data are very exciting because we described two unexpected and unexplained associations between adverse reactions and leukoreduction. However, our observations do not prove cause and effect, and therefore require further investigation before we can say with certainty that leukoreduction is responsible for so many fewer cardiopulmonary complications," said Blumberg.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is introducing a new blood surveillance system to track severe transfusion reactions, which should provide more detailed information to support or refute the study, said Blumberg.
Earlier, the researchers have shown that the odds of post-surgical infection and death are greatly reduced by leukoreduction.
White cells from donor blood can attack the immune system of the blood recipient; removing them diminishes the chances of an inflammatory response or infection, according to Blumberg's research.
The study is published online in the journal, Transfusion.