This document provides information on blood transfusion and component therapy. It discusses taking blood or blood products from one individual and inserting them into another for conditions like blood loss or anemia. Component therapy involves transfusing only the specific component needed, like platelets or red blood cells. A single unit of blood can be separated into various components through centrifugation, with each component having a different storage time and temperature. Potential recipients are discussed for different blood components like platelets, red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and more. The preparation and storage of various components like platelet concentrate and red blood cells is outlined.
This document provides information on blood transfusion and component therapy. It discusses taking blood or blood products from one individual and inserting them into another for conditions like blood loss or anemia. Component therapy involves transfusing only the specific component needed, like platelets or red blood cells. A single unit of blood can be separated into various components through centrifugation, with each component having a different storage time and temperature. Potential recipients are discussed for different blood components like platelets, red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and more. The preparation and storage of various components like platelet concentrate and red blood cells is outlined.
This document provides information on blood transfusion and component therapy. It discusses taking blood or blood products from one individual and inserting them into another for conditions like blood loss or anemia. Component therapy involves transfusing only the specific component needed, like platelets or red blood cells. A single unit of blood can be separated into various components through centrifugation, with each component having a different storage time and temperature. Potential recipients are discussed for different blood components like platelets, red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and more. The preparation and storage of various components like platelet concentrate and red blood cells is outlined.
This document provides information on blood transfusion and component therapy. It discusses taking blood or blood products from one individual and inserting them into another for conditions like blood loss or anemia. Component therapy involves transfusing only the specific component needed, like platelets or red blood cells. A single unit of blood can be separated into various components through centrifugation, with each component having a different storage time and temperature. Potential recipients are discussed for different blood components like platelets, red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and more. The preparation and storage of various components like platelet concentrate and red blood cells is outlined.
IMMUNOHEMATOLOGY LECTURE 12: BLOOD TRANSFUSION AND COMPONENT THERAPY
Menissa S. Acierto, RMT, MEd
BLOOD TRANSFUSION Taking of blood or blood-based products from one individual and inserting them into the circulatory system of another Done in cases of massive blood loss due to trauma, surgery, shock and where the cell producing mechanism fails Used primarily to treat two conditions: Inadequate oxygen-carrying capacity because of anemia or blood loss Insufficient coagulation proteins to provide adequate hemostasis Autologous transfusion – refer to those transfusions in which the blood donor and recipient are the same Allogenic transfusion – refer to blood transfused to someone other than the donor COMPONENT THERAPY Transfusion of the specific component needed by the patient or recipient With this, we can treat several patients with the blood from one donor, giving optimal use of every donation of blood BLOOD COMPONENT PREPARATION AND STORAGE Each unit of blood collected may be transfused as whole blood or split into components The components may be transfused to different recipient as the need arises Dividing a unit of whole blood into component is a common practice that optimizes the use of blood as a therapeutic material COMPONENTS AVAILABLE FOR TRANSFUSION AND POTENTIAL RECIPIENTS COMPONENTS AVAILABLE FOR TRANSFUSION AND POTENTIAL RECIPIENTS COMPONENT PREPARATION FROM A SINGLE UNIT OF BLOOD (PROCEDURE I) COMPONENT PREPARATION FROM A SINGLE UNIT OF BLOOD (PROCEDURE II) STORAGE TIME AND TEMPERATURE FOR COMPONENTS STORAGE TIME AND TEMPERATURE FOR COMPONENTS BLOOD COMPONENTS AND PLASMA DERIVATIVES Blood components refer to a product separated from a single unit of whole blood Oxygen Carrying Components Whole blood Red cell concentrate Leukocyte poor blood Washed PRBC Frozen RBC Platelet products Platelet rich plasma Platelet concentrate Plasma product Fresh frozen plasma Frozen plasma Cryoprecipitate Stored plasma WBC Granulocyte concentrate BLOOD COMPONENTS AND PLASMA DERIVATIVES Plasma Derived components (Plasma derivatives are separated from a large volume of pooled plasma by fractionation process) Coagulation factor concentrate Factor VIII concentrate Factor IX complex concentrate and others Oncotic agents Albumin Plasma protein fraction Immune serum globulin Hepatitis B Immune Globulin (HBIg) Varicella zoster Immune globulin (VZIg) Rh immune globulin (RhIg) Tetanus Immune Globulin (TIg) WHOLE BLOOD Composition Donor blood mixed with the anticoagulant and preservative solution (diluted in the proportion of 8 parts of blood to one part anticoagulant) Anticoagulant and preservative Citrate in the anticoagulant chelates ionized calcium preventing activation of the coagulation system Glucose, adenine and phosphate (if present) serve as substrates for RBC metabolism during storage Indication Whole blood is used to replace the loss of both RBC mass and plasma volume in actively bleeding patients WHOLE BLOOD Contraindication of whole blood Definite contraindication is severe chronic anemia Patients with severe chronic anemia have reduced amount of RBC but are compensated by increasing their plasma volume to restore the total blood volume Patients with severe chronic anemia do not need plasma in whole blood and the unneeded plasma may develop pulmonary edema and heart failure. For a typical 70 kg (155 lb) human, each unit of whole blood transfused can result to: 3 to 5 % increase in hematocrit 1 to 1.5 g/dl of hemoglobin RED BLOOD CELLS Preparation RBC are prepared by removing approximately 80% of the plasma from a unit of whole blood (AABB suggests 230 to 256g [225 to 250 ml]) of plasma be removed from WB The average hematocrit is between 65 and 80% (not to exceed 80%) RBC is prepared anytime during the normal dating period by centrifugation or sedimentation. PRBC are preserved by additive solutions Indication RBC is indicated for increasing the RBC mass in patients who require increased oxygen-carrying capacity The decreased RBC mass may be caused by: Decreased bone marrow production (leukemia or aplastic anemia) Decreased RBC survival (hemolytic anemia) Surgical or traumatic bleeding RED BLOOD CELLS Advantages of RBC over whole blood Equal O2 capacity in half volume of WB Significant reduction in the level of isoagglutinins (anti-A and anti-B) thus facilitating the safe transfusion of Group O cells to non-Group O recipients Significant reduction in the levels of acid, citrate, and potassium load in patients with cardiac, renal or liver disease Need for RBC transfusion There are no set hemoglobin levels that indicate a need for transfusion Consensus committees suggest trigger values of hemoglobin less than 6.0 g/dl in the absence of disease and between 8 and 10 g/dl with disease Contraindication of RBC RBC is contraindicated in patients who are well compensated for the anemia such as those with chronic renal failure RED BLOOD CELLS In a typical 70 kg (155 lb) human, each unit of transfused RBC is expected to increase Hemoglobin level: 1-1.5 g/dl Hematocrit : 3-5% RBC aliquots Aliquoted RBC is the product most often transfused during neonatal period for the treatment of anemia caused by spontaneous fetomaternal hemorrhage, obstetric accidents and internal hemorrhage Irradiation Done on RBC and platelets to reduce the risk of transfusion associated graft versus host (TA-GVH) disease in patients receiving allogenic bone marrow transplants (BMT) RED BLOOD CELLS Whole blood vs. PRBC
Whole blood vs. PRBC
RED BLOOD CELLS PRBC has a high hematocrit, hence very viscous and slow rate of infusion. To lower the viscosity and increase rate of infusion, it is added with saline solution. Avoid calcium-containing fluid such as Ringer’s lactate solution because it can cause clotting. Glucose is also avoided because it can cause clumping LEUKOCYTE-REDUCED RBC The average unit of RBC contains approximately 2x109 leucocytes The leucocytes in the units of RBC must be reduced, because donor leucocytes can cause: Febrile non-hemolytic transfusion reactions HLA Alloimmunization Transfusion-related acute lung injury Transfusion-related graft-versus-host disease Transfusion-related immune suppression Donor leucocytes may harbor pathogens such as CMV EBV HIV HTLV LEUKOCYTE-REDUCED RBC Most of the white cells can be removed by discarding the buffy coat after inverted centrifugation A reduced leucocyte content to less than 5x108 prevents most febrile non-hemolytic transfusion reactions. With the use of third-generation leucocyte reduction filter, the leucocyte content may be less than 1x106 or even 104 WASHED RBC The cause of most allergic reactions is plasma proteins. The washing of RBC removes plasma proteins. Washed RBC are used for the rare patients with IgA deficiency and anti-IgA antibodies FROZEN DEGLYCEROLIZED RBC Freezing RBC is done with endocryophylactic agent such as glycerol. Two procedures may be employed: High glycerol (40 percent weight per volume). The freezer must provide storage at minus 65oC Low glycerol (20 percent weight per volume) liquid nitrogen freezing provides a storage temperature of about -120oC Freezing RBC with glycerol allows the long term storage of rare blood units, autologous units and units for special purposes (such as intrauterine transfusion). It has an extended shelf life of 10 yrs or more in frozen state The process of deglycerolization removes nearly all leucocytes and plasma Both washed RBC and deglycerolized RBC are to be used within 24 hours. PLATELET CONCENTRATE Function of platelets Essential for the formation of the primary hemostatic plug and maintenance of normal homeostasis Thrombocytopenia maybe caused by: Decreased platelet production (after chemotherapy or malignancy) Increased destruction (DIC) Massive transfusion (because of the rapid use of platelets for hemostasis and the dilution of platelets by resuscitation fluids and stored blood Platelet transfusion are indicated for patients Who are bleeding due to thrombocytopenia Who have platelets abnormally functioning Who have platelet counts under 20,000/uL (prophylaxis) Who have undergone chemotherapy, DIC and massive transfusion PLATELET CONCENTRATE PREPARATION Whole blood is maintained at 20-24oC before and during preparation. The centrifuge is set at 22oC. Light spin centrifugation refers to 3,200 rpm spin for 2-3 minutes. This spin is necessary to separate most of the RBC but leave most of the platelets suspended in plasma After light spin, the platelet rich plasma is expressed off until enough plasma must remain on the RBC to maintain a 70 to 80% hematocrit The PRP is recentrifuged at 22oC using a heavy spin (approximately 3,600 rpm for 5 minutes). This will separate the platelets from the plasma After heavy spin, the plasma is expressed off leaving approximately 50 to 70 ml on the platelets. The platelet concentrate must have a pH of 6.0 during storage. (The remaining plasma may be frozen as fresh frozen plasma(FFP) or single donor plasma frozen within 24 hours (SDP-24) or stored as liquid recovered plasma Platelet concentrate is allowed to lie undisturbed for 1 to 2 hours at 20-24oC to allow the platelets to disaggregate PLATELET CONCENTRATE PREPARATION Platelets are then resuspended on a rotator with constant gentle agitation at 20-24oC to ensure reliability Particular care must be taken to avoid bacterial contamination The shelf life is 5 days from the date of collection. If the system is opened, transfusion must be done within 6 hours All of the units for a single dose (typically 6 to 8 units for an adult) can be pooled in a single bag before transfusion. Once pooled, the product must be transfused within 4 hours of pooling PLATELET CONCENTRATE COMPONENT Each unit of platelet concentrate must contain at least 5.5x1010 platelets; stored at 20-24oC with continuous agitation, contains 50 to 70 ml plasma, pH >6 and has a shelf life of 5 days Each unit of platelet concentrate should increase the platelet count by 5,000 to 10,000 in the typical 70 kg human Platelet components maybe washed to remove plasma proteins that cause severe allergic reactions Washed platelet concentrate requires a 4-hours expiration time Platelet concentrate may be contaminated by RBC and WBC and may cause alloimmunization of the recipient. Therefore, a platelet concentrate by an Rh-positive donor should not be administered to an Rh-negative woman of childbearing age to avoid alloimmunization to the D antigen of the donor PLATELET CONCENTRATE PLATELETPHERESIS Component is prepared from one donor and must contain a minimum of 3x1011 platelets, stored at 20-24oC with agitation, contains approximately 300 ml plasma and has a shelf life of 5 days One plateletpheresis component is equivalent to one dose of random platelet concentrate (a pool of 4 to 6 units) It is generally indicated for patients who are unresponsive or refractory to random platelets due to HLA alloimmunization or to limit exposure to multiple donors PLATELET CONCENTRATE PLATELET COUNT INCREMENT A corrected platelet count increment using a 1-hr post-infusion blood sample can provide patient’s response to a platelet component Formula: Absolute platelet increment/ul x body surface Number of platelets transfused Note: absolute platelet increment is the post transfusion platelet count minus the pre- transfusion platelet count, the body surface area is expressed as square meters, and the number of platelets transfused is determined by multiplying the number of units (bags) of platelets by 0.55 (the number of platelets in each unit of concentrate expressed in 1011) PLATELET CONCENTRATE PLATELET COUNT INCREMENT Example: A patient with 10,000/uL platlet count has a body surface area of 1.3 m2. Six units of platelets were given. The 1-hr post transfusion platelet count is 50,000/uL What is the corrected platelet count?
(50,000/uL-10,000/uL) x 1.3 = 15, 758/Ul
6 units x 0.55/unit The answer shows that the patient has a good increment >10,000/uL and is not refractory to platelets <5,000/uL indicates refractoriness The formula can be used for plateletpheresis by using 3 ( times 1011) as the number of platelets in each unit GRANULOCYTAPHERESIS AND BUFFY COAT Patients develop neutropenia and serious bacterial and fungal infection after receiving intensive chemotherapy or bone marrow transplant or both Granulocyte transfusions are done in Cases of fever Neutrophil count less than 500/uL Septicemia or bacterial infection unresponsive to antibiotics Reversible bone marrow hypoplasia Reasonable chance for patient survival Neonates with impaired neutrophil function GRANULOCYTAPHERESIS AND BUFFY COAT Granulocyte concentrates are prepared by cytapheresis. Each product contain 1x1010 granulocytes if steroids (corticosteroid) or hydroxyethyl starch (HES) or both are used Corticosteroids are administered to the donor 12 to 24 hours before pheresis to increase the number of circulating granulocytes by pulling them from marginating pool Hydroxyethyl starch (HES) is a sedimenting agent that increases the separation between WBC or RBC thus facilitating the recovery of the buffy coat Granulocyte concentrates contain 200 to 600 ml plasma, stored at 20-24oC and shelf life is 24 hours Dosage For adults, the usual dose is one granulocytapheresis product daily for 4 or more days For neonates, a buffy coat or a granulocytapheresis unit is usually given once or twice FRESH FROZEN PLASMA (FFP) FFP is prepared from fresh whole blood within 6 hours of collection, hence, must be preserved by prompt rapid freezing FFP is used to treat multiple coagulation deficiencies occurring in patients with Liver failure DIC Vitamin K deficiency Warfarin toxicity Massive transfusion FFP should not be used for blood volume expansion or protein replacement because safer products are available for these purposes such as: Serum albumin Synthetic colloids Balanced salt solutions FFP should be ABO compatible with the recipient’s RBC’s but the Rh type can be disregarded FRESH FROZEN PLASMA (FFP) FFP or SDP-24 is a frequent by-product of concentrated RBC and platelet concentrate production: For FFP, plasma must be frozen within 8 hours of collection if the anticoagulant used is CPD, CP2D or CPDA-1. It can be stored at -30oC for 12 months For SDP-24, plasma must be frozen within 24 hours of collection and stored at -18oC or colder PLASMA (FROZEN PLASMA AND STORED PLASMA) Frozen plasma is separated from whole blood within 24 hours from the time of collection Stored plasma was formerly known as a liquid plasma or cryoprecipitate-poor plasma. It is separated from whole blood after 24 hours of storage at 4oC. Plasma has small amounts of Factors V and VIII and thus is not recommended for patients with deficiency of either or both of these clotting factors Plasma is used For the treatment of stable coagulation deficiency especially factor XI As a storage of plasma for patients undergoing plasma exchange Frozen plasma can be stored at -30oC for up to 12 months CRYOPRECIPITATED ANTI-HEMOPHILIC FACTOR Anti hemophilic factor (AHF) is also called factor VIII. It is the cold precipitated concentration of Factor VIII Cryoprecipitated AHF also contains fibrinogen, von Willebrand’s factor (vWF) and Factor XIII Each unit of cryoprecipitate must contain at least 80 units of Factor VIII Cryoprecipitated AHF is used primarily for fibrinogen replacement in patients with liver failure or DIC. It can also be used as a source of fibrin glue, which is applied topically on prosthetic vascular graft as well as vascular tissue planes in surgery It is prepared from FFP by freezing at -70oC followed by thawing at 4oC Cryosupernate is the residual plasma frozen after removal of cryoprecipitate FACTOR VIII CONCENTRATE Prepared by pharmaceutical firms by fractionation and lyophilization of pooled plasma Derived from plasma obtained by plasmapheresis or from volunteer blood donors Stored at refrigerator temperature and is reconstituted with saline at the time of infusion Used to treat patients with Hemophilia A or Factor VIII deficiency FACTOR VIII CONCENTRATE Prepared from large volumes of pooled plasma, the methods employed to inactivate or eliminate virus contamination of the product include: Pasteurization – involves heating the product to 60oC for 10 hours using albumin, sucrose or glycine as a stabilizer (to prevent denaturation), stabilizers are then removed and then lyophilized Solvent and detergent disrupt the viral coat chemically to inactivate any virus present The solvents used are ethyl ether and tri-(n-butyl)phosphate (TNBP) The detergents used are cholate and Tween 80 The concentrate is purified to remove the solvent and detergent and then lyophilized Monoclonal Purification – done by immunoaffinity chromatography, it uses murine monoclonal antibody directed at Factor VIII or von Willebrand’s factor (vWF) moiety bound on a solid phase substrate to selectively absorb the factor VIII: vWF complexes, product is then lyophilized Recombinant products obtained through recombinant DNA technology are made available after the identification and isolation of the gene or human Factor VIII Porcine Factor VIII is made from porcine (pig) plasma 1-Deamino-beta-D-arginine vasopressin is a synthetic analog of vasopressin. When injected, the endothelial cells release intracellular stores of Factor VIII and vWF FACTOR VIII CONCENTRATE FACTOR IX CONCENTRATE Prepared from pooled plasma using various methods of separation and viral inactivation Factor IX complex concentrate (prothrombin complex) contains Factor II, VII, IX and X Factor IX concentrate is indicated only for Factor IX deficiency (Hemophilia B) ANTI-THROMBIN III Anti-thrombin III is a protease inhibitor with activity toward thrombin Liquid plasma and FFP are alternative sources of anti-thrombin III OTHER CONCENTRATES Protein C is a vitamin K-dependent factor and serine protease inhibitor. It inactivates factors V and VIII thus preventing thrombus formation Alpha protease inhibitor concentrates are used for patients with alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, which is associated with emphysema and liver disease C1-esterase inhibitor concentrates for the treatment of life-threatening angloedema of the mucosa and submucosa of the respiratory and gastrointestinal tract ALBUMIN AND PLASMA PROTEIN FRACTION Albumin and plasma protein fraction are prepared by chemical fractionation of pooled plasma Plasma protein fraction is available only as a 5 percent solution containing 83 percent albumin and 17v percent globulin Albumin and FFP are used to treat patients requiring volume replacements Albumin is used routinely as the replacement fluid in plasmapheresis procedures; and in the treatment of burn patients IMMUNE GLOBULIN Immune globulin (Ig) is primarily IgG prepared from pooled plasma Ig is available for intravenous or intramuscular administration Intramuscular product must not be given intravenously because severe anaphylactic reaction may occur Intravenous product is given slowly to lessen the risk of infection Ig is used for: Patients with congenital hypogammaglobulinemia (both IM and IV administration) Patients exposed to hepatitis A or measles (IM administration) Patients with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) and myasthenia gravis IMMUNE GLOBULIN Hyperimmuneglobulins Available for the prevention of hepatitis B, Varicella, zoster rabies and mumps These are prepared from the plasma of donors who have high antibody titers to the specific virus causing the disease RhIg is used to prevent immunization of Rh negative mother pregnant with Rh- positive infant Hyperimmuneglobulins may cause anaphylactic reactions especially for patients with IgA deficiency and previous anaphylactic reactions to blood components NORMAL SERUM ALBUMIN (NSA) NSA is prepared from salvaged plasma, pooled and fractionated by a cold alcohol process, then treated with heat inactivation NSA is used a colloid volume expander in patients who are hypovolemic and hypoproteinemic SYNTHETIC VOLUME EXPANDERS Normal saline Ringer’s solution Ringer’s lactate Balanced electrolyte solution Dextran (high or low molecular weight) HES (Hydroxyethyl Starch)