Publications by authors named "Vooght K"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to evaluate the need for exchange transfusions in neonatal care, track the use and waste of transfusion products, and understand their prevalence across the Netherlands.
  • - Data from all 9 neonatal intensive care units and 15 other hospitals were analyzed over an 11-year period, revealing that severe immune hemolysis was the most common reason for transfusions while around 50% of products ordered were not used.
  • - The findings showed that only 14.6 out of every 100,000 liveborn neonates required an exchange transfusion, indicating that these procedures are quite rare in the Netherlands and a significant number of products go unused.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the connection between red blood cell autoimmunity and alloimmunity in transfused patients, focusing on the incidence of red blood cell alloimmunisation in those with a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT).
  • Among 47,285 patients analyzed, those with a positive DAT had a cumulative alloimmunisation incidence of 4.5% after receiving 10 transfusions, which was statistically similar to the 4.2% incidence in the control group.
  • The findings suggest that while DAT-positive patients may have a higher risk of red blood cell immune responses, their overall risk is not significantly higher than that of control patients, indicating that more extensive matching for transfusions may not be necessary in these cases.
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Previous studies found exposure to red blood cell transfusions from female donors who have been pregnant reduces survival in male patients compared to exposure to male donor products, but evidence is not consistent. We postulate the previously observed association is modified by offspring sex, with an expected increased mortality risk for male patients receiving units from female donors with sons. Here, marginal structural models were used to assess the association between exposure to units from ever-pregnant donors, ever-pregnant donors with sons and ever-pregnant donors with daughters, and mortality.

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Background And Objectives: Donor characteristics have been implicated in transfusion-related adverse events. Uncertainty remains about whether sex, and specifically pregnancy history of the blood donor, could affect patient outcomes. Whether storage duration of the blood product could be important for patient outcomes has also been investigated, and a small detrimental effect of fresh products remains a possibility.

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Transfusion of red blood cells (RBCs) from female donors has been associated with increased risk of mortality. This study aims to investigate the associations between donor-recipient sex and posttransfusion mortality and morbidity in critically ill patients who received RBC transfusions from either male-only donors or from female-only donors (unisex-transfusion cases). Survival analysis was used to compare 4 groups: female-to-female, female-to-male, male-to-female, and male-to-male transfusion.

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Background: Intracranial hemorrhage is seen more frequently in acute leukemia patients compared to the general population. Besides leukemia-related risk factors, also risk factors that are present in the general population might contribute to hemorrhagic complications in leukemia patients. Of those, cardiovascular risk factors leading to chronic vascular damage could modulate the occurrence of intracranial hemorrhage in these patients, as during their disease and treatment acute endothelial damage occurs due to factors like thrombocytopenia and inflammation.

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Maternal alloantibodies directed against fetal red blood cell (RBC) antigens may cause potentially life-threatening haemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN). Dutch transfusion guidelines therefore prescribe preventive cEK matching for all (pre-)fertile females. To quantify the impact of cEK matching, we compared overall and antigen-specific cumulative RBC alloimmunisation incidences in females and males aged <45 years.

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Background: Renal failure and renal replacement therapy (RRT) affect the immune system and could therefore modulate red blood cell (RBC) alloimmunization after transfusion.

Study Design And Methods: We performed a nationwide multicenter case-control study within a source population of newly transfused patients between 2005 and 2015. Using conditional multivariate logistic regression, we compared first-time transfusion-induced RBC alloantibody formers (N = 505) with two nonalloimmunized recipients with similar transfusion burden (N = 1010).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to explore how low platelet counts and platelet transfusions relate to the incidence of intracranial hemorrhage in patients with acute leukemia.
  • Out of 859 leukemia patients, 17 experienced intracranial hemorrhage and were compared to 55 matched controls, revealing a 3.5% cumulative incidence of the condition.
  • Results indicated that lower platelet counts, particularly in the week leading up to the hemorrhage, and the number of platelet transfusions were associated with a higher risk of intracranial hemorrhage, suggesting that clinical factors may contribute to increased transfusion requirements.
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Plasma transfusion is indicated for replenishment of coagulative proteins to stop or prevent bleeding. In 2014, the Netherlands switched from using ~300mL fresh frozen plasma (FFP) units to using 200mL Omniplasma, a solvent/detergent treated pooled plasma (SD plasma), units. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of SD plasma on clinical plasma use, associated bleeding, and transfusion reaction incidences.

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Introduction: Electronic health care data offers the opportunity to study rare events, although detecting these events in large datasets remains difficult. We aimed to develop a model to identify leukemia patients with major hemorrhages within routinely recorded health records.

Methods: The model was developed using routinely recorded health records of a cohort of leukemia patients admitted to an academic hospital in the Netherlands between June 2011 and December 2015.

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Background And Objectives: Despite increasingly meticulous haemovigilance reporting throughout the world, a systematic assessment of the cost of transfusion reactions is still lacking. This is partly caused by the fact that such an assessment requires a subjective expert assessment of the additional costs linked to the adverse reaction. Data on the cost of transfusion reactions could support decision-making regarding blood transfusion safety measures.

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Background: Storage time of platelet (PLT) concentrates has been negatively associated with clinical efficacy outcomes. The aim of this study was to quantify the association between storage time of PLT concentrates and interval to the next PLT transfusion for different types of PLT components, stored for up to 7 days and transfused to transfusion-dependent hematooncology patients with thrombocytopenia.

Study Design And Methods: From a cohort of patients from 10 major Dutch hospitals, patients were selected whose transfusion patterns were compatible with PLT transfusion dependency due to hematooncologic disease.

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Importance: Transfusion of red blood cells from female donors has been associated with increased mortality in male recipients.

Objective: To quantify the association between red blood cell transfusion from female donors with and without a history of pregnancy and mortality of red blood cell recipients.

Design, Setting, And Participants: Retrospective cohort study of first-time transfusion recipients at 6 major Dutch hospitals enrolled from May 30, 2005, to September 1, 2015; the final follow-up date was September 1, 2015.

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Background: Extension of storage time of platelet (PLT) concentrates may result in an increased risk of bacteremia, directly via transfusion of contaminated products or indirectly via transfusion-related immunomodulation. We aimed to quantify the association of storage time of PLT concentrates and all-cause bacteremia in hematologic patients.

Study Design And Methods: We established a cohort of hematologic patients who received a PLT transfusion between 2005 and 2015.

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Background: The dramatic impact of hemosiderosis on survival in chronically transfused patients with hereditary anemia is well known. We evaluated whether patients receiving multiple red blood cell (RBC) transfusions are adequately screened for hemosiderosis.

Methods: We retrospectively assessed hemosiderosis screening and prevalence in adult patients that received over twenty RBC units in the University Medical Centre Utrecht from 2010 till 2015.

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Purpose Of Review: Immunotherapeutic strategies are emerging as novel therapeutic approaches in multiple myeloma, with several mAbs being in advanced stages of clinical development. Of these, CD38 targeting antibodies appear very promising. In trials with anti-CD38 mAb daratumumab, all patients demonstrated panreactivity in red blood cell (RBC) panel testing, complicating the selection of compatible RBCs for transfusion.

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Red cell alloimmunization may induce severe hemolytic side effects. Identification of risk-modifying conditions will help tailor preventative strategies. This study aims to quantify the associations of hematologic malignancies and solid cancers with red cell alloimmunization in patients receiving red cell transfusions.

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