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Transfusion of prion-filtered red cells does not increase the rate of alloimmunization or transfusion reactions in patients: results of the UK trial of prion-filtered versus standard red cells in surgical patients (PRISM A)

Authors :
Caroline Casey
Charlotte Llewelyn
Vicky Hicks
Lorna M. Williamson
Alison J Deary
Moira Malfroy
Tania Reed
Lynn Manson
Sarah Meredith
Shilpi Purohit
Coral MacRury
Louise Choo
Ana Mora
Modupe Elebute
Source :
British journal of haematology. 160(5)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

This study, conducted for the UK Blood Transfusion Services (UKBTS), evaluated the clinical safety of red cells filtered through a CE-marked prion removal filter (P-Captâ„¢). Patients requiring blood transfusion for elective procedures in nine UK hospitals were entered into a non-randomized open trial to assess development of red cell antibodies to standard red cell (RCC) or prion-filtered red cell concentrates (PF-RCC) at eight weeks and six months post-transfusion. Patients who received at least 1 unit of PF-RCC were compared with a control cohort given RCC only. About 917 PF-RCC and 1336 RCC units were transfused into 299 and 291 patients respectively. Twenty-six new red cell antibodies were detected post-transfusion in 10 patients in each arm, an overall alloimmunization rate of 4.4%. Neither the treatment arm [odds ratio (OR) 0.93, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.3, 2.5] nor number of units transfused (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.8, 1.1) had a significant effect on the proportion of patients who developed new alloantibodies. No pan-reactive antibodies or antibodies specifically against PF-RCC were detected. There was no difference in transfusion reactions between arms, and no novel transfusion-related adverse events clearly attributable to PF-RCC were seen. These data suggest that prion filtration of red cells does not reduce overall transfusion safety. This finding requires confirmation in large populations of transfused patients.

Details

ISSN :
13652141
Volume :
160
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of haematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6a63dde646082e6c0e95e587d5f4d5dd