AI Article Synopsis

  • Red cell concentrates (RCCs) at Canadian Blood Services can be stored for up to 10 years, but accidental warming above -65°C can lead to their discard to prevent issues during transfusion.
  • A study tested 30 RCCs that experienced warming events of different durations, comparing their quality after thawing to 10 control samples that were not warmed.
  • Results showed that RCCs with a single warming event maintained quality similar to controls, suggesting policies could allow for the retention of these units rather than automatic disposal.

Article Abstract

Background: Red cell concentrates (RCCs) may be cryopreserved at Canadian Blood Services (CBS) for up to 10 years; however, inadvertent warming of these units over the prescribed storage temperature (≤ -65°C) may occur. These units may be discarded from inventory to avoid potential adverse transfusion outcomes. This study aimed to assess the quality of RCCs that experienced unintentional transient warming events (TWEs) related to freezer failures.

Study Design: Thirty cryopreserved RCCs with known TWEs were selected for this study and classified into three different experimental groups (Event 1 (n = 5) TWE > -65°C for 34 min; Event 2 (n = 23) TWE > -65°C for 48 h; and both Event 1 and Event 2 (n = 2) TWE > -65°C for 34 min and 48 h). Ten additional RCCs with no known TWEs, cryopreserved over the same period, were selected as controls. Thawed RCCs were deglycerolized using the Haemonetics ACP 215, and in vitro quality was assessed throughout hypothermic storage.

Results: RCCs from the control and all three experimental groups met the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) guidelines for hematocrit, total hemoglobin, and hemolysis at expiry. RCCs experiencing a singular TWE had similar in vitro quality to control RCCs.

Discussion: This study's findings revealed that single exposures to specific documented TWEs did not significantly impact the quality of RCCs post-deglycerolization. While units should still be assessed on a case-by-case basis upon TWE, our work provides the first-ever evidence that supports a broader policy of unit retention by blood centers.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11637290PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/trf.18054DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

red cell
8
cell concentrates
8
transient warming
8
warming events
8
impact quality
8
rccs
8
quality rccs
8
rccs twes
8
three experimental
8
experimental groups
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!