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Current challenges of blood transfusions in patients with thalassemia in India and future perspectives. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The introduction of regular blood transfusions has changed thalassemia major from a deadly childhood condition to a manageable chronic disorder, particularly in South Asia where it's common.
  • In India, issues like inadequate blood supply, lack of regulations, and poor facilities for blood testing contribute to challenges in safe transfusion practices, leading to complications for patients.
  • Raising awareness, training healthcare workers, and improving resource management are crucial for enhancing transfusion safety, while new affordable treatments could lessen dependence on transfusions.

Article Abstract

The introduction of regular red blood cell transfusions transformed thalassemia major from a fatal childhood disease into a chronic disorder. Thalassemia is highly prevalent in South Asia, including the Indian subcontinent, and blood transfusion remains the cornerstone of management for these patients. But safe blood transfusions still remain a major problem in India. Difficulties in maintaining adequate blood inventory, a lack of a national blood act, and fragmented blood transfusion services are some of the major contributing factors for the delay in blood supply. In most of the blood centers, alloantibody detection facilities and extended red cell antigen typing are unavailable. Awareness is the key to reducing alloimmunization, which limits the effectiveness of transfusions and the potential availability of blood. Patients with thalassemia are also at high risk of transfusion-transmitted infections unless appropriate blood screening is in place. Hence, many patients remain under-transfused, resulting in decreased health and quality-of-life outcomes. Facilities such as leucoreduction and immunohematological monitoring following a blood transfusion are often lacking in India, especially at the sub-district level. Continuous efforts to raise community awareness, regular training of health-care workers, and proper utilization of available resources are essential to ensuring safe blood transfusions for patients with thalassemia. Access to the new treatments at an affordable cost may reduce the blood transfusion burden for thalassemia patients in India.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tracli.2024.03.004DOI Listing

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