5th Handbook of Transfusion Medicine PDF
5th Handbook of Transfusion Medicine PDF
5th Handbook of Transfusion Medicine PDF
Transfusion
Medicine
Editor: Dr Derek Norfolk
Handbook of
Transfusion
Medicine
Editor: Dr Derek Norfolk
Editor
Dr Derek Norfolk
c/o Caroline Smith
JPAC Manager
NHS Blood and Transplant
Longley Lane
SHEFFIELD
S5 7JN
Email: [email protected]
Contents
List of figures
ix
List of tables
xi
Preface
xiii
2.3 Testing for red cell antigens and antibodies in the laboratory
8
8
9
10
10
10
10
11
11
13
15
16
16
16
16
16
17
17
17
iii
27
31
4.2 Documentation
32
4.3 Communication
33
33
33
34
34
35
35
36
36
37
37
38
38
38
38
38
39
41
5.1 Haemovigilance
43
44
44
45
53
53
5.2.1
5.2.2
5.2.3
5.2.4
iv
17
18
18
Contents
55
55
58
59
59
61
63
63
64
65
66
66
66
67
67
67
68
68
69
69
71
74
74
76
78
78
78
79
79
79
80
80
80
82
82
83
85
86
86
86
87
87
89
92
92
92
92
93
93
93
93
94
8.6 Haemoglobinopathies
8.6.1
8.6.2
8.6.3
8.6.4
8.6.5
8.6.6
-thalassaemia major
Red cell alloimmunisation in thalassaemia
Sickle cell disease
Red cell transfusion in sickle cell disease
Red cell alloimmunisation in sickle cell disease
Hyperhaemolytic transfusion reactions
94
95
95
95
96
97
97
98
Transfusion support for myelosuppressive treatment
98
Red cell transfusion
98
Prophylactic platelet transfusion
98
Refractoriness to platelet transfusion
99
Selection of compatible blood for patients who have received a
marrow or peripheral blood HSC transplant from an ABO or
RhD-incompatible donor
100
8.7.6 Prevention of transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease
(TA-GvHD) 102
8.7.7 Prevention of cytomegalovirus transmission by transfusion
103
8.7.8 Long-term transfusion support for patients with myelodysplasia
103
8.7.1
8.7.2
8.7.3
8.7.4
8.7.5
103
105
107
108
108
109
vi
109
109
Contents
11 Therapeutic apheresis
11.1 Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE)
11.1.1 Indications for therapeutic plasma exchange
11.1.2 Risks associated with therapeutic plasma exchange
11.1.3 Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
110
111
111
112
113
113
115
118
118
119
120
120
121
121
123
123
124
124
125
125
125
126
127
129
129
130
131
131
132
132
132
132
vii
135
135
136
Appendices
139
141
Appendix 2: Acknowledgements
147
Abbreviations andglossary
149
Abbreviations
151
Glossary
155
Index
viii
133
161
List of figures
Figure 3.1 Production of blood components and blood derivatives
19
37
46
81
84
ix
List of tables
Table 2.1 Distribution of ABO blood groups and antibodies
Table 2.2 Choice of group of red cells, platelets, fresh frozen plasma
(FFP) and cryoprecipitate according to recipients ABO group
20
21
21
22
23
24
24
25
25
30
40
48
51
55
56
68
76
77
78
82
xi
85
94
96
97
100
101
101
102
104
104
111
112
119
120
121
121
122
Table 10.6 Red cells for small-volume transfusion of neonates and infants 123
Table 10.7 Suggested transfusion thresholds for neonatal prophylactic
platelet transfusion (excluding NAIT)
123
130
131
xii
Preface
Although the Handbook of Transfusion Medicine has reached a fifth edition, its purpose
remains the same to help the many staff involved in the transfusion chain to give the right
blood to the right patient at the right time (and, hopefully, for the right reason). Transfusion
is a complex process that requires everyone, from senior doctors to porters and telephonists,
to understand the vital role they play in safely delivering this key component of modern
medicine. Training and appropriate technological and managerial support for staff is
essential, and e-learning systems such as http://www.learnbloodtransfusion.org.uk are
freely available. However, SHOT (Serious Hazards of Transfusion) annual reports highlight
the importance of a poor knowledge of transfusion science and clinical guidelines as a
cause of inappropriate and unnecessary transfusions. The handbook attempts to summarise
current knowledge and best clinical practice. Wherever possible it draws upon evidencebased guidelines, especially those produced by the British Committee for Standards in
Haematology (BCSH). Each chapter is now preceded by a short list of Essentials
keyfacts extracted from the text.
We have much to congratulate ourselves about. Haemovigilance data from SHOT show
that blood transfusion in the UK is very safe, with a risk of death of around 3 in 1000000
components issued. Transfusion-transmitted infections are now rare events. Lessons from
blood transfusion about the importance of patient identification have improved many other
areas of medical practice. But not all is well. Six of the nine deaths associated with
transfusion in 2012 were linked to transfusion-associated circulatory overload (TACO),
emphasising the importance of careful clinical assessment and monitoring. More than half
of serious transfusion incidents are still caused by human error, especially in the identification
of patients at sampling and transfusion, and each incident is accompanied by 100 nearmiss events. Training and competency assessment of practitioners has been only partially
effective and innovative solutions such as the use of bedside barcode scanners or
transfusion checklists are slowly entering practice.
Most UK regions have seen a significant reduction in the use of red cells over the last
decade, especially in surgery, but requests for platelet and plasma components continue
to rise. Audits show significant variation in transfusion practice between clinical teams and
poor compliance with clinical guidelines. Changing clinical behaviour is difficult, but IT-based
clinician decision support systems, linked to guidelines, have real potential to improve
prescribing of blood components. As we move from eminence-based to evidence-based
medicine, good clinical research will be an important tool in effecting change. Since the
last edition of the handbook in 2007, there has been an encouraging growth in high-quality
research in transfusion medicine, including large randomised controlled trials with major
implications for the safe and effective care of patients. These include the seminal CRASH2
trial showing the benefit of a cheap and readily available antifibrinolytic treatment
(tranexamic acid) in reducing mortality in major traumatic haemorrhage and studies
confirming the safety of restrictive red cell transfusion policies in many surgical and critical
care patients. High-quality systematic reviews of clinical trials in transfusion therapy are an
increasingly valuable resource. Everyone involved in transfusion has a role in identifying
clinically important questions that could be answered by further research.
Paul Glaziou, professor of evidence-based medicine at Bond University in Australia, talks
about the hyperactive therapeutic reflex of clinicians and the importance of treating the
patient, not the label. Furthermore, people increasingly want to be involved in decisions
xiii
will occur, although many precautions, such as the importation of all manufactured
plasma products and fresh frozen plasma for patients born after 1 January 1996, remain
in place. No practical vCJD screening test for blood donations has been developed.
All UK countries have now introduced automated pre-release bacterial screening of
platelet components, although the incidence of bacterial transmission had already
fallen significantly following better donor arm cleaning and diversion of the first
2030mL of each donation.
Implementation of the Blood Safety and Quality Regulations 2005 (BSQR) has led to
the development (and inspection) of comprehensive quality systems in hospital
transfusion services and the reporting of serious adverse events and reactions to the
Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). MHRA now works
very closely with the SHOT haemovigilance scheme with the objective of improving
patient safety.
Having edited this fifth edition of the handbook, I am increasingly impressed by the
achievements, and fortitude, of my predecessor Dr Brian McClelland in taking the first four
through to publication. Colleagues from many disciplines have kindly contributed to or
reviewed sections of the handbook (see Appendix 2) but the responsibility for any of the
inevitable errors and omissions is mine alone. I would like to thank the members of the JPAC
Standing Advisory Committee on Clinical Transfusion Medicine for their support and advice.
A special word of thanks is due to Caroline Smith for her skill and good humour in organising
so many aspects of the publication process and ensuring I met (most of) the deadlines.
As well as the printed edition, the handbook will also be published in PDF and web
versions that can be accessed through http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk. As
important new information emerges, or corrections and amendments to the text are
required, these will be published in the electronic versions. Transfusion medicine is
changing quickly and it is important to use the up-to-date versions of evidence-based
guidelines. Links to key guidelines and other online publications are inserted in the text
and a list of key references and useful sources of information are given in Appendix 1.
Derek Norfolk
August 2013
xiv
1 Transfusion ten
commandments
1
Essentials
Is blood transfusion necessary in this patient?
If so, ensure:
right
right
right
right
blood
patient
time
place.
1 Transfusion should only be used when the benefits outweigh the risks and there are
no appropriate alternatives.
2 Results of laboratory tests are not the sole deciding factor for transfusion.
3 Transfusion decisions should be based on clinical assessment underpinned by
evidence-based clinical guidelines.
4 Not all anaemic patients need transfusion (there is no universal transfusion trigger).
5 Discuss the risks, benefits and alternatives to transfusion with the patient and gain
their consent.
6 The reason for transfusion should be documented in the patients clinical record.
7 Timely provision of blood component support in major haemorrhage can improve
outcome good communication and team work are essential.
8 Failure to check patient identity can be fatal. Patients must wear an ID band (or
equivalent) with name, date of birth and unique ID number. Confirm identity at every
stage of the transfusion process. Patient identifiers on the ID band and blood pack
must be identical. Any discrepancy, DO NOT TRANSFUSE.
9 The patient must be monitored during the transfusion.
10 Education and training underpin safe transfusion practice.
These principles (which are adapted from the NHS Blood and Transplant Transfusion 10
commandments bookmark with permission) underpin safe and effective transfusion
practice and form the basis for the handbook.
2 2 Basics of blood
groupsandantibodies
5
Essentials
ABO-incompatible red cell transfusion is often fatal and its prevention is the most
pregnancy can cause transfusion reactions, haemolytic disease of the fetus and
newborn (HDFN) or problems in selecting blood for regularly transfused patients.
To prevent sensitisation and the risk of HDFN, RhD negative or Kell (K) negative girls
and women of child-bearing potential should not be transfused with RhD or K
positive red cells except in an emergency.
Use of automated analysers, linked to laboratory information systems, for blood
grouping and antibody screening reduces human error and is essential for the
issuing of blood by electronic selection or remote issue.
When electronic issue is not appropriate and in procedures with a high probability of
requiring transfusion a maximum surgical blood ordering schedule (MSBOS) should
be agreed between the surgical team and transfusion laboratory.
There are more than 300 human blood groups but only a minority cause clinically
significant transfusion reactions. The two most important in clinical practice are the ABO
and Rh systems.
These are usually produced when an individual is exposed to blood of a different group by
transfusion or pregnancy (alloantibodies). This is a particular problem in patients who
require repeated transfusions, for conditions such as thalassaemia or sickle cell disease,
and can cause difficulties in providing fully compatible blood if the patient is immunised to
several different groups (see Chapter 8). Some antibodies react with red cells around the
normal body temperature of 37C (warm antibodies). Others are only active at lower
temperatures (cold antibodies) and do not usually cause clinical problems although they
may be picked up on laboratory testing.
as those against the Rh antigens, are smaller IgG molecules and do not directly cause
agglutination of red cells. These incomplete antibodies can be detected by the antiglobulin
test (Coombs test) using antibodies to human IgG, IgM or complement components
(antiglobulin) raised in laboratory animals. The direct antiglobulin test (DAT) is used to
detect antibodies present on circulating red cells, as in autoimmune haemolytic anaemia
or after mismatch blood transfusion. Blood group antibodies in plasma are demonstrated
by the indirect antiglobulin test (IAT). Nearly all clinically significant red cell antibodies can
be detected by an IAT antibody screen carried out at 37C (see section2.7).
Antibodies in plasma
UK blood donors
none
47%
anti-B
42%
anti-A
8%
AB
A and B
none
3%
Cryoprecipitate contains very little immunoglobulin and has never been reported to cause
significant haemolysis. In view of the importance of making AB plasma readily available,
AB cryoprecipitate manufacture and availability is a low priority for the UK Blood Services.
Table 2.2 Choice of group of red cells, platelets, fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and
cryoprecipitate according to recipients ABO group
Patients
ABOgroup
Red cells
Plateletsa
Fresh frozen
plasma (FFP) b
Cryoprecipitate
A or B
A or B
O
First choice
Second choice
Third choice
AB
A
First choice
Second choice
A
c
A
d
Third choice
AB
B
O or B
B
First choice
Second choice
Ad
AB
Third choice
B
O or A
AB
First choice
AB
Ad
AB
AB
Second choice
A or B
A or B
Third choice
Oc
Bd
Screening for high-titre anti-A and anti-B is not required if plasma-depleted group O red cells in SAG-M are used
important to avoid exposing RhD negative girls and women of child-bearing potential to
RhD positive red cell transfusions except in extreme emergencies when no other group
isimmediately available.
10
of clinical significance
If the antibody screen is positive
If the patient has had an ABO-incompatible marrow or haemopoietic stem cell transplant
If the patient has had an ABO-incompatible solid organ transplant in the last 3 months
For neonates or fetuses, if the mother has an IgG red cell antibody present in her plasma.
11
12
3Providing
safe blood
13
14
Essentials
Unpaid volunteers, donating regularly, are key to the provision of safe and sufficient
Blood transfusion in the UK is now very safe indeed and most serious adverse events
originate in the hospital rather than the blood transfusion centre (see Chapter 5). However,
ensuring a safe and effective blood supply remains essential. This requires a combination
of high-quality donor recruitment and selection, infection screening, serological testing and
blood component production (followed by rational clinical use). The four UK Blood Services
NHS Blood and Transplant, Northern Ireland Blood Transfusion Service, Scottish National
Blood Transfusion Service and Welsh Blood Service maintain common standards for
blood donation, testing and blood products. The Joint UKBTS Professional Advisory
Committee (JPAC) is responsible for producing the Guidelines for the Blood Transfusion
Services in the UK, often known as the Red Book (http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/).
In 2011 the UK Blood Services issued 2.1 million units of red cells, 300000 platelet doses,
288000 units of fresh frozen plasma and 126000 units of cryoprecipitate.
15
health, lifestyle, travel history, medical history and medication is completed before
each donation.
The minimum mandatory infection screen on all donations is for hepatitis B and C,
HIV, HTLV and syphilis, and extra tests are performed as required.
The risk of transmission of prion diseases such as variant CreutzfeldtJakob
disease (vCJD) is reduced by excluding at-risk donors (including recipients of a
blood transfusion or tissue/organ transplant since 1980), removing white cells from
donations (leucodepletion), importing plasma derivatives from countries with a low
risk of vCJD and providing imported, virus-inactivated fresh frozen plasma (FFP) for
patients born on or after 1 January 1996.
Donations are routinely ABO and RhD typed and screened for clinically important
blood group antibodies.
Modern transfusion practice is based on the use of blood components rather than
whole blood donations.
Plasma derivatives are licensed medicines and include albumin solutions,
coagulation factor concentrates and immunoglobulins.
Hepatitis B HBsAg
Human immunodeficiency virus anti-HIV 1 and 2 and HIV NAT (nucleic acid testing)
Hepatitis C anti-HCV and HCV NAT
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus anti-HTLV I and II
Syphilis syphilis antibodies.
Some donations are tested for cytomegalovirus (CMV) antibodies to provide CMV negative
blood for patients with certain types of impaired immunity (see Chapter 5).
Additional tests, performed in special circumstances, include:
Malarial antibodies
West Nile Virus antibodies
Trypanosoma cruzi antibodies.
16
donorsince 1980
Anyone who has received human pituitary-derived hormones, grafts of human dura
Some group O donations are screened for high levels of anti-A and anti-B antibodies to
reduce the risk of haemolytic reactions when group O plasma, platelets or other components
containing a large amount of plasma (e.g. red cells for intrauterine or neonatal exchange
transfusion) are transfused to group A, B or AB patients, especially neonates and infants.
17
Every donation is tested to determine the ABO and RhD group of the red cells and the
plasma is screened to detect the most common blood group antibodies that might cause
problems in a recipient. Some donations are tested for a wider range of clinically significant
blood groups (extended phenotyping) to allow closer matching and reduce the development
of alloantibodies in patients who need long-term red cell transfusion support (see Chapter8).
Blood for neonatal or intrauterine use has a more extensive antibody screen (see Chapter10).
18
Education
Recruitment
Selection
Donation
Plateletpheresis
Test for:
HIV
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
HTLV
Syphilis
ABO + RhD
Other phenotypes
Red cell antibodies
(CMV, Hbs, malaria)
Red
cells
Pooled
platelets
Fresh
frozen
plasma
Filter to remove
leucocytes
Plasma
(from
non-UK
source)
Fractionation
4C
35
days
Confirm compatibility
NB: platelet shelf life can
be extended to 7 days with
use of bacterial screening
36
22C days
25C months
(Pool)
(Thaw)
Plasma
derivatives,
e.g. albumin,
immunoglobin
Patient
19
Red cells
These are used to restore oxygen carrying capacity in patients with anaemia or blood loss
where alternative treatments are ineffective or inappropriate. They must be ABO compatible
with the recipient (see Table 2.2). Clinical indications for red cell transfusion are discussed
in Chapters 7 to 10.
Red cells in additive solution
In red cells in additive solution (Table 3.1) the majority of plasma is removed and replaced
by 100mL saline, adenine, glucose and mannitol additive solution (SAG-M).
Table 3.1 Red cells in additive solution
Volume (mL)
220340
Haematocrit (L/L)
0.50.7
530
Storage temperature
26C
Shelf life
20
Platelets are produced in two ways (see Tables 3.2 and 3.3):
Whole blood donations are centrifuged and the buffy coats (between the red cell and
plasma layers) from four donations are pooled in the plasma of one of the donors (male,
to reduce the risk of transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) see Chapter 5).
An ATD of platelets is obtained from a single donor by apheresis (donors may give two
or three ATDs at a single session).
The UK Blood Services aim to provide more than 80% of platelet doses by apheresis to
reduce the exposure of patients to multiple donors (a vCJD risk-reduction measure).
Platelets are stored in temperature-controlled incubators (2024C) with constant agitation
(refrigerated platelets are rapidly removed from the circulation). The recent introduction of
automated bacterial screening has allowed some Blood Services to extend the shelf life
from 5 to 7 days after donation.
Table 3.2 Platelets from pooled buffy coats
Number of donors per pack
300
Anticoagulant
CPD
Storage
Shelf life
199
Anticoagulant
Storage
Shelf life
Irradiated platelets
Platelets may be irradiated to prevent TA-GvHD in susceptible patients. They retain their
normal shelf life.
Platelets in additive solution
After washing to remove most of the plasma the platelets are resuspended in 200mL of
platelet additive solution (PAS). This component is indicated for patients with recurrent
severe allergic or febrile reactions to standard platelet transfusions. The shelf life is reduced
to 24 hours after preparation and they must be ordered specially from the Blood Service.
Some platelets are lost in the washing process and the component still contains around
10mL residual plasma.
21
274
Anticoagulant
CPD
Storage
<25C
Shelf life
22
Volume (mL)
200 (standardised)
Anticoagulant
Sodium citrate
Storage
<18C
Shelf life
23
Cryoprecipitate pools
Number of donors
43
189
Fibrinogen (mg/pack)
Storage
<25C
<25C
Shelf life
Granulocytes
Although their clinical effectiveness is controversial, transfusion of granulocytes (neutrophils
phagocytic white blood cells) may be indicated in patients with life-threatening soft tissue
or organ infection with bacteria or fungi and low neutrophil counts, usually in the setting of
severe, prolonged neutropenia after cytotoxic chemotherapy.
There are two main granulocyte-rich components available: buffy coats derived from
whole blood donations and granulocytes collected by apheresis from individual donors.
Because of contaminating red cells, granulocyte components must be ABO and RhD
compatible and crossmatched with the recipient. They are irradiated before issue to
prevent TA-GvHD. Daily transfusions are given, with monitoring of response, until recovery
of bone marrow function.
Individual buffy coats
These buffy coats (Table 3.7) contain large numbers of red cells and the Hb/haematocrit of
the recipient must be monitored. Usefully, the high platelet content may reduce the need
for platelet transfusions. The recommended dose is ten buffy coats daily for adults
(1020mL/kg for smaller children and infants).
Table 3.7 Buffy coat (granulocytes)
Mean volume per pack (mL)
Haematocrit (L/L)
0.45
70
Storage
2024C
Shelf life
Pooled buffy coats (granulocytes pooled buffy coat derived in additive solution and plasma)
This component (see Table 3.8) was introduced in the UK in 2012. Although the manufacturing
process is more complicated, it has the advantages of lower volume, less red cell and
plasma contamination and resuspension in male donor plasma and additive solution to
reduce the risk of TRALI. The dose is two packs (20 donations) for an adult and
1020mL/kg for children.
24
Table 3.8 Granulocytes pooled buffy coat derived in additive solution and plasma
Mean volume per pack (mL)
207 (175250)mL
1.0 (11010 )
Haematocrit (L/L)
0.15
Storage
Shelf life
10
Apheresis granulocytes
The collection of a therapeutic dose of apheresis granulocytes (Table 3.9) requires the
donor to be pre-treated with steroids and/or injections of granulocyte colony stimulating
factor (G-CSF). Hence, their collection is restricted to directed donors (usually a relative) for
an individual patient, rather than UK Blood Service volunteer donors, and the component
is only available in certain clinical centres.
312
>11010
Haematocrit (L/L)
0.23
111
Storage
2024C
Shelf life
Plasma derivatives
These are licensed medicinal products manufactured from human plasma donations.
Some of the main products used in hospital practice are listed below but the reader is
referred to the British National Formulary (BNF http://bnf.org/bnf) and the individual
Summary of Product Characteristics for more detailed information about formulation and
clinical indications. Although these products are manufactured from large donor pools,
sometimes thousands of donations, all now undergo multiple pathogen inactivation steps
to eradicate transfusion-transmitted viruses. Since 1999, all plasma derivatives used in the
UK are derived from imported plasma (a vCJD risk-reduction measure).
Human albumin solution
Human albumin solution (HAS) contains no clotting factors or blood group antibodies and
crossmatching is not required. The clinical indications for HAS are controversial. Crystalloid
solutions or synthetic colloidal plasma substitutes are alternatives for use as plasma
expanders in acute blood or plasma loss. HAS should not be used to correct the low
serum albumin level often associated with acute or chronic illness. Side effects include
occasional severe hypersensitivity reactions. HAS is available in two forms:
Isotonic solutions (4.5 and 5.0% in volumes of 50 to 500mL): Often used to replace
25
26
28
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Essentials
Avoid unnecessary and inappropriate transfusions.
Preventable wrong blood into patient incidents are nearly always caused by
human error and may cause fatal reactions due to ABO incompatibility.
transfusion blood sampling, sample handling in the laboratory, collecting the wrong
component from the blood bank or transfusion to the patient.
The identity check between patient and blood component is the crucial final
opportunity to avoid potentially fatal mistransfusion.
At every stage of the blood administration process the key elements are positive
patient identification, excellent communication and good documentation. These can
be enhanced by the use of electronic transfusion management systems and
barcode technology.
Hospitals should develop local transfusion policies based on national guidelines and
ensure all staff involved in the clinical transfusion process are appropriately trained
and competency assessed.
Where possible, patients should give valid consent for transfusion based on
appropriate information and discussion, but signed consent is not a legal requirement.
Non-essential out of hours requests for transfusion and overnight administration of
blood should be avoided wherever possible because of an increased risk of errors.
29
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Most mistransfusion incidents are caused by identification errors at the time of pre-
Table 4.1 Safe blood administration (adapted from the BCSH Guideline on
Administration of Blood Components, 2009, with permission)
Positive patient
identification
Pre-transfusion
documentation
oftransfusion
Special requirements (e.g. irradiated, CMV negative).
Must include:
Minimum patient identifiers and gender
Diagnosis, any significant co-morbidities and reason for transfusion
Component required, volume/number of units and special requirements
Time and location of transfusion
Name and contact number of requester.
30
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Administration to patient
Patients should be under regular visual observation and, for every unit
transfused, minimum monitoring should include:
Pre-transfusion pulse (P), blood pressure (BP), temperature (T) and
check RR as well.
If there are any symptoms or signs of a possible reaction monitor and
transfusion completed.
Inpatients observed over next 24 hours and outpatients advised to report
31
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Unique patient ID number (wherever possible a national number such as the NHS No.
in England and Wales, CHI No. in Scotland or HSC No. in Northern Ireland).
In emergency situations or where the patient cannot be immediately identified at least one
unique identifier, such as A&E or trauma number, and patient gender should be used.
Wherever possible, patients for blood sampling or transfusion should be asked to state
their full name and date of birth and this must exactly match the information on the
identification band. To ensure accuracy and legibility, the ID band should be printed from the
hospitals computerised patient administration system, ideally at the bedside. Otherwise,
verification of identity should be obtained, if possible, from a parent or carer at the bedside
and checked against the identification band. Identification discrepancies at any stage
of the transfusion process must be investigated and resolved before moving to the
next stage.
Identification of patients, samples and blood components throughout the transfusion
process can be enhanced by the use of electronic transfusion management systems using
barcodes on ID bands and blood components and hand-held scanners linked to the
laboratory information systems. Most UK hospitals still use manual ID checks at the bedside
although electronic blood-tracking systems to control access to blood refrigerators are in
more widespread use.
4.2 Documentation
The documentation required at each stage of the transfusion process should be kept to an
essential minimum and, whether hard copy or electronic, be user-friendly to encourage
compliance by busy clinical teams. Combined transfusion prescription and monitoring
charts or care pathways can be used to record the information and provide a clear audit
trail. The development of standardised transfusion documentation in the UK has the
potential to reduce errors by clinical staff moving between hospitals. All transfusion
documentation should include the minimum patient identifiers. Documentation in the
clinical record should include:
Pre-transfusion:
The reason for transfusion, including relevant clinical and laboratory data.
The risks, benefits and alternatives to transfusion that have been discussed with the
patient and documentation of consent (see below).
The components to be transfused and their dose/volume and rate.
Any special requirements, such as irradiated components.
During transfusion:
Details of staff members starting the transfusion.
Date and time transfusion started and completed.
Donation number of the blood component.
Record of observations made before, during and after transfusion.
Post-transfusion:
Management and outcome of any transfusion reactions or other adverse events.
Whether the transfusion achieved the desired outcome (e.g. improvement in symptoms,
Hb increment).
32
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
4.3 Communication
Verbal communication between clinical staff and the laboratory risks misunderstanding or
transcription error. Written or electronic communication should be used wherever possible
although requests for urgent transfusion should be supplemented by telephone discussion
with laboratory staff. Good communication is especially important at times of staff
handover between shifts, both on the wards and in the laboratory, and can be enhanced
by a standardised and documented process.
33
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
form.
All inpatients must wear an identity band (or risk-assessed equivalent).
Collection of the sample and labelling of the sample tubes must be performed as one
those on the request form and identity band), date and time of sampling and identity of
person taking the sample.
Labels printed away from the patient (e.g. addressograph labels) must not be used on
the transfusion sample but labels printed on demand and applied to the tube next to
the patient, as used in some electronic ID systems, are acceptable.
All handwritten labels must be legible.
BCSH guidelines recommend that laboratories have a zero tolerance policy for
rejecting samples that do not meet the above minimum requirements.
34
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
35
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Staff collecting blood must carry documentation, such as a blood collection slip or the
and local policy should be followed. If two people perform the check, each should
perform it independently.
If the checking process is interrupted, it must start again.
Transfusion must only go ahead if the details on the patient identity band (positively
confirmed by the patient if possible), the laboratory-generated label attached to the
component pack and the transfusion prescription are an exact match. Any discrepancy
must immediately be reported to the transfusion laboratory.
Check the expiry date of the component and ensure the donation number and blood
group on the pack matches that on the laboratory-generated label attached to the pack.
Any special requirements on the transfusion prescription, such as irradiated
component, must be checked against the label on the pack.
Inspect the component pack for signs of leakage, discoloration or clumps.
A compatibility report form issued by the laboratory and the patients clinical records
must not form part of the bedside identity check (checking paper against paper).
Compatibility report forms are generated by the same laboratory computer used to
produce the laboratory-generated label on the blood pack and the two will always
match (even if the blood is being presented to the wrong patient). It is strongly
recommended (BCSH and National Patient Safety Agency (www.npsa.nhs.uk)) that
laboratories do not issue compatibility report forms to avoid their inappropriate use in
the final administration check.
The prescription and other associated paperwork should be signed by the person
administering the component and the component donation number, date, time of
starting and stopping the transfusion, dose/volume of component transfused and name
of the administering practitioner should be recorded in the clinical record.
To reduce the risk of bacterial transmission, blood component transfusions should be
completed within 4 hours of removal from a controlled temperature environment.
Non-essential overnight transfusion of blood should be avoided, except in adequately
staffed specialist clinical areas, because of the increased risk of errors.
36
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
BLOOD PACK
PATIENTS WRISTBAND
SURNAME
FORENAME
DATE OF BIRTH
HOSPITAL NUMBER
Pulse, BP and temperature should be checked around 15 minutes after the start of
37
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Blood and other solutions can be infused through the separate lumens of multi-lumen
central venous catheters as rapid dilution occurs in the bloodstream. Where possible, one
lumen should be reserved for the administration of blood components.
38
4 Safe transfusion right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Some patients using patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) devices delivering opioid pain
killers, such as those on palliative care or with sickle cell pain crises, have very poor
peripheral venous access and it is convenient (and kind) to use the administration line
used for transfusion. Standard concentrations of morphine, hydromorphone or meperidine
have no harmful effect on co-administered red cells.
4 Safe transfusion - right blood, right patient, right time and right place
Table 4.2 summarises key points about the transfusion of commonly used components in
adult patients (see Chapter 10 for administration of components in paediatric/neonatal
practice). Clinical use of blood components is discussed in Chapters 710.
39
Table 4.2 Blood component administration to adults (doses and transfusion rates
are for guidance only and depend on clinical indication) (based on BCSH Guideline
on the Administration of Blood Components, 2009, with permission)
Blood component
Notes on administration
Red cells in
additive solution
Platelets
One adult therapeutic dose (ATD) (pool of four units derived from whole blood
donations or single-donor apheresis unit) typically raises the platelet count by
2040109 /L.
Usually transfused over 3060 minutes per ATD.
Platelets should not be transfused through a giving-set already used for other
blood components.
Start transfusion as soon as possible after component arrives in the clinical area.
Fresh frozen
plasma (FFP)
Cryoprecipitate
40
5 Adverse effects
of transfusion
41
42
Essentials
Modern blood transfusion is very safe but preventable death and major morbidity
still occurs.
Inappropriate decisions to transfuse put patients at unnecessary risk of transfusion
staff are the root cause of most wrong blood into patient incidents, including ABOincompatible transfusions.
Severe acute transfusion reactions are the most common cause of major morbidity.
These include immunological reactions (predominantly allergy/anaphylaxis,
haemolytic reactions and lung injury), circulatory overload and rare bacterial
contamination of blood components.
If a serious transfusion reaction is suspected stop the transfusion; assess
clinically and start resuscitation if necessary; check that the details on the patients
ID band and the compatibility label of the blood component match; call for medical
assistance; contact the transfusion laboratory.
Transfusion-transmitted infection is now a very rare event, underpinned by voluntary
donation, donor selection procedures and microbiological testing, but constant
vigilance is required as new threats emerge.
Variant CJD transmission by blood has had a major impact on transfusion practice
in the UK although the risk appears to be receding.
Compared with many medical and surgical procedures modern blood transfusion is
extremely safe but deaths and major morbidity still do occur. Errors in the identification of
patients, blood samples and blood components are the root cause of many preventable
serious adverse events (see Chapter 4). Around 1 in 13000 blood component units is
transfused to the wrong patient (not always with adverse consequences) and up to 1 in
1300 pre-transfusion blood samples are taken from the wrong patient.
Serious acute transfusion reactions are often unpredictable but patients are put at
unnecessary risk by inappropriate decisions to transfuse. In its 2012 Annual Report, the UK
Serious Hazards of Transfusion haemovigilance scheme (SHOT http://www.shotuk.org/)
described 252 incidents of incorrect blood component transfused (each underpinned by
100 near misses). Ten ABO-incompatible transfusions (all due to clinical errors) and 145
incidents of avoidable, delayed or under-transfusion were reported. There were nine
transfusion-related deaths (six associated with transfusion-associated circulatory overload)
and 134 cases of major morbidity (most often following acute transfusion reactions).
Transfusion-transmitted infection is now a rare event but there is no room for complacency
as the emergence of new infectious agents requires constant vigilance.
5.1 Haemovigilance
Haemovigilance is the systematic surveillance of adverse reactions and adverse events
related to transfusion with the aim of improving transfusion safety. Transfusion reactions
and adverse events should be investigated by the clinical team and hospital transfusion
team and reviewed by the hospital transfusion committee. SHOT invites voluntary reporting
of serious adverse transfusion reactions, errors and events as well as near-miss incidents.
Under the Blood Safety and Quality Regulations 2005 (BSQR) there is a legal requirement
43
Identification errors (of patients, blood samples and blood components) by hospital
to report serious adverse reactions and events to the Medicines and Healthcare Products
Regulatory Agency (MHRA). The MHRA also inspects blood establishments (transfusion
centres) and hospital transfusion laboratories to ensure their processes and quality
standards comply with the BSQR. SHOT and MHRA work closely together and have a
joint reporting system through the SABRE IT system (http://www.mhra.gov.uk/
Safetyinformation/Reportingsafetyproblems/Blood/).
Haemovigilance can identify transfusion hazards and demonstrate the effectiveness of
interventions. SHOT reporting highlighted the importance of transfusion-related acute lung
injury (TRALI) as a potentially lethal risk of transfusion and confirmed the benefit of sourcing
fresh frozen plasma (FFP) from male donors. More recently, transfusion-associated
circulatory overload (TACO) has been identified as an important preventable cause of
death or major morbidity. Incidents of avoidable, delayed or under-transfusion are
increasingly reported, leading to initiatives to improve the knowledge base of clinical staff
and awareness of evidence-based guidelines.
Adverse effects of transfusion are commonly classified as infectious or non-infectious;
acute or delayed; caused by errors or pathological reactions; and by their severity (mild,
moderate or severe).
oedema or anaphylaxis.
Acute haemolytic transfusion reactions e.g. ABO incompatibility.
Bacterial contamination of blood unit range from mild pyrexial reactions to rapidly
44
specific treatment and prevention (where possible) of future events. The guideline provides
a flowchart for the recognition and management of ATR based on presenting symptoms
and clinical signs (Figure 5.1).
Key principles in the management of ATR include:
Transfusing patients in clinical areas where they can be directly observed by
local transfusion policies and the training of clinical and laboratory staff.
If a patient develops new symptoms or signs during a transfusion:
clinical assessment is essential as this may be due to continuing blood loss and
continuation of the transfusion may be life-saving.
Except for patients with mild allergic or febrile reactions, a standard battery of tests should
be performed, including full blood count, renal and liver function tests and assessment of
urine for Hb. Further tests are determined by the symptoms and clinical signs (Table 5.1).
45
Stop the transfusion and maintain venous access with physiological saline.
Check vital signs and start resuscitation if necessary.
As soon as possible, check that the identification details of the patient, their ID band
46
Severe/life-threatening
Yes
Moderate
Mild
Continue transfusion
Pruritus/rash only
No
Evidence of:
Life-threatening Airway and/or Breathing and/or Circulatory problems and/or wrong blood given and/or evidence of contaminated unit
STOP THE TRANSFUSION: undertake rapid clinical assessment, check patient ID/blood compatibility level, visually assess unit
Patient exhibiting possible features of an acute transfusion reaction, which may include:
fever, chills, rigors, tachycardia, hyper- or hypotension, collapse, flushing, urticaria, pain
(bone, muscle, chest, abdominal), respiratory distress, nausea, general malaise
Figure 5.1 Clinical flowchart for the management of acute transfusion reactions (reproduced from BCSH Guideline on the Investigation
and Management of Acute Transfusion Reactions, 2012, with kind permission of British Committee for Standards in Haematology)
47
Review at HTC
Transfusionrelated event
Perform
appropriate
investigations
Discontinue
(do not discard
implicated
unit/s)
Not consistent
with condition
orhistory
Transfusionunrelated
If consistent
with underlying
condition or
transfusion
history, consider
continuation
of transfusion
at slower rate
and appropriate
symptomatic
treatment
Continue transfusion
Investigations
Standard investigationsa
Samples for repeat compatibility testing, direct antiglobulin test
(DAT ), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and haptoglobins
Blood cultures from patient
Coagulation screen
Do not discard implicated unit
If febrile reaction sustained, return blood component to laboratory,
repeat serological investigations (compatibility testing, antibody
screen and DAT), measure haptoglobins and culture blood
component. Contact a Blood Service consultant to discuss
the need for recall of components from same donation.
Standard investigationsa
Measure IgA level if <0.07g/L (in absence of generalised
hypogammaglobulinaemia) perform confirmatory test with
sensitive method and check for IgA antibodies
Standard investigationsa
Check O2 saturation or blood gases
Chest X-ray (mandatory if symptoms severe)
If severe or moderate allergic reaction suspected, measure IgA
level (as above)
If severe allergic/anaphylactic reaction, consider measurement
of serial mast cell tryptase (immediate, 3 and 24 hours)
Standard investigations: full blood count, renal and liver function tests, assessment of urine for Hb
Conscious patients often become very unwell within the first few minutes of transfusion,
complaining of flushing, loin and abdominal pain and a feeling of impending doom. If the
patient is unconscious, anaesthetised or cannot communicate, the first indication of a
reaction may be tachycardia, hypotension and bleeding into the skin or from needle
wounds, emphasising the importance of careful monitoring of vital signs.
Immediate clinical management of patients with suspected severe acute haemolytic
transfusion should follow the steps outlined in Figure 5.1 and the investigations in Table5.1.
After disconnecting the transfusion pack and starting resuscitation:
48
Maintain venous access with physiological saline and call for urgent medical support.
Check the compatibility label on the blood pack against the patients ID band (and seek
another patient may be at risk. Return the (sealed) transfusion pack and giving-set
forinvestigation.
Seek early support and advice from critical care and haematology teams and admit the
patient to an intensive care unit if possible.
Although rare, this more often occurs with platelet components (which are stored at
2224C) than with red cells refrigerated at 26C and can rapidly be fatal. Measures to
reduce bacterial contamination from the donor arm have significantly reduced this risk (see
section 5.3) but awareness and rapid response are important. The transfusion of a pack
contaminated with highly pathogenic bacteria often causes an acute severe reaction soon
after the transfusion is started. Initially, this may be indistinguishable from an acute
haemolytic reaction or severe allergic reaction. Typical symptoms and signs include rigors,
fever (usually >2C above baseline), hypotension and rapidly developing shock and
impaired consciousness.
Immediate management and investigation follows the principles outlined in Figure 5.1 and
Table 5.1. In particular:
Inspection of the pack may show abnormal discoloration, aggregates or offensive smell,
49
Staff in clinical areas carrying out blood transfusion must be trained in the emergency
50
TACO
Patient characteristics
Any
Onset
Oxygen saturation
Reduced
Reduced
Blood pressure
Often low
Often high
Normal or low
Elevated
Temperature
Often raised
Normal
Chest X-ray
Echocardiogram
Normal
Abnormal
Normal
Elevated
Blood count
No specific changes
Fluid challenge
Improves
Worsens
Response to diuretics
Worsens
Improves
51
Classical TRALI is caused by antibodies in the donor blood reacting with the patients
neutrophils, monocytes or pulmonary endothelium. Inflammatory cells are sequestered in
the lungs, causing leakage of plasma into the alveolar spaces (non-cardiogenic pulmonary
oedema). Most cases present within 2 hours of transfusion (maximum 6 hours) with severe
breathlessness and cough productive of frothy pink sputum. It is often associated with
hypotension (due to loss of plasma volume), fever and rigors and transient peripheral blood
neutropenia or monocytopenia. Chest X-ray shows bilateral nodular shadowing in the lung
fields with normal heart size. TRALI is often confused with acute heart failure due to circulatory
overload (see Table 5.2) and treatment with powerful diuretics may increase mortality.
can advise on the need to investigate the implicated blood donors for antibodies to human
leucocyte antigens (HLA) or human neutrophil antigens (HNA) with a view to removing
them from the donor panel.
SHOT data suggest an approximate incidence of TRALI of 1 in 150000 units transfused. It is
most common after transfusion of plasma-rich blood components such as FFP or platelets
and implicated donors are usually females sensitised during previous pregnancy. Since the
UK Blood Services switched to using male donors for producing FFP, resuspending pooled
platelets in male plasma and screening female apheresis platelet donors for leucocyte
antibodies, SHOT has documented a significant fall in both reported cases and mortality
from TRALI.
52
In the case of moderate FNHTRs (pyrexia >2C above baseline or >39C or rigors and/or
myalgia), the transfusion should be stopped. If the symptoms worsen, or do not quickly
resolve, consider the possibility of a haemolytic or bacterial reaction. In most cases it is
prudent to resume transfusion with a different blood unit.
Patients with recurrent FNHTRs can be pre-medicated with oral paracetamol (or a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug if rigors or myalgia are a problem) given at least one hour
before the reaction is anticipated, although the evidence base for effectiveness is poor.
Patients who continue to react should have a trial of washed blood components.
53
Mild FNHTRs (pyrexia >38C, but <2C rise from baseline) can often be managed simply
by slowing (or temporarily stopping) the transfusion. Giving an anti-pyretic, such as
paracetamol, may be helpful. The patient should be monitored closely in case these are
the early signs of a more severe ATR.
falling Hb concentration or failure to achieve the expected increment, jaundice, fever and
occasionally haemoglobinuria or acute renal failure. Delayed reactions may be missed,
especially if the patient has been discharged. In sickle cell disease, the clinical features of
a DHTR may be misdiagnosed as a sickle cell crisis.
Clinical suspicion of DHTRs should be confirmed by laboratory investigations including
blood count and reticulocytes, examination of the blood film, plasma bilirubin, renal
function tests and LDH. Serological investigations should include repeat blood group and
antibody screen (on pre- and post-transfusion patient samples), DAT and elution of
antibodies from the patients red cells for identification.
Treatment of DHTRs is usually supportive, sometimes requiring further transfusion. The
offending antibodies must be recorded on the transfusion laboratory computer and
medical records and patients are usually issued with an Antibody Card to carry and
present to clinical staff whenever further transfusion is required. Patients investigated by
Blood Services reference laboratories will also have their antibodies recorded on a central
database. All DHTRs should be reported to SHOT and the MHRA.
54
platelet-specific alloantibodies in the patient that also damage their own (antigen-negative)
platelets by an innocent bystander reaction. This severe, and potentially fatal, complication
has become rare since the introduction of leucodepleted blood components.
Advice in diagnosis and management should be sought from transfusion medicine
specialists and Blood Service laboratories. Platelet transfusions are usually ineffective (but
may be given in high doses in patients with life-threatening bleeding) but most patients
show a prompt and sustained response to high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg).
Hepatitis C virus
HIV
All donations
0.79
0.035
0.14
0.65
0.025
0.14
2.23
0.133
0.18
55
No. of
incidents
No. of
infected
recipients
Deaths
related to
infection
Major
morbidity
Minor
morbidity
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
11
13
13
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis E
HIV
HTLV
Parvovirus B19
5.3.1.1 Hepatitis A
This is primarily an acute enteric infection spread by the faeco-oral route (contaminated
food or water). Transmission by transfusion is very rare as affected individuals are usually
unwell and deferred from donation. There is no carrier state and blood donations are not
screened for hepatitis A antibody or antigen. As a non-enveloped virus it is resistant to
methods of pathogen inactivation such as solvent detergent treatment.
5.3.1.2 Hepatitis B
The hepatitis B virus (HBV) is readily transmitted by infectious blood or body fluids, including
sexual intercourse and parenteral drug use, and perinatal transmission is common in
endemic areas such as the Far East and China. Most patients recover after the initial
episode of acute hepatitis but some develop a chronic carrier state, estimated at 350
million individuals worldwide, with long-term risk of cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular
cancer. Hepatitis B remains the most commonly reported viral TTI in the UK because of
window period transmissions but more sensitive screening tests for blood donations, such
as HBV NAT, are increasingly effective.
5.3.1.3 Hepatitis C
There are around 170 million affected individuals worldwide. Initial infection is often
symptomless but around 80% of patients develop a chronic carrier state with long-term
risk of cirrhosis, liver failure and liver cancer. Hepatitis C was formerly a major cause of
TTI, known as non-A non-B hepatitis, but the risk of transmission by blood transfusion
has fallen dramatically since the introduction of antibody screening in 1991 and
progressively more sensitive tests for hepatitis C antigen and RNA since 1999.
5.3.1.4 Hepatitis E
Caused by a small non-enveloped RNA virus, hepatitis E was formerly believed to be most
prevalent in warmer climates and less developed countries where it is mainly spread by
the faeco-oral route. In Western countries, recent studies have indicated large numbers of
asymptomatic infections and up to 13% of individuals in England are seropositive for
hepatitis E antibodies. Hepatitis E usually produces a self-limiting acute hepatitis but can
56
pregnant women. In an emergency, such as major haemorrhage, standard leucocytedepleted components should be given to avoid delay.
Standard pre-storage leucodepleted components are suitable for all other transfusion
recipients, including haemopoietic stem cell transplant patients, organ transplant
patients and immune deficient patients, including those with HIV.
5.3.1.7 Human T-cell lymphotropic virus types I and II (HTLV I and II)
These T-cell-associated RNA retroviruses are endemic in southwest Japan, the Caribbean
Basin, sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South America, where they affect 1520 million
people. They are transmitted by sexual contact, breastfeeding, shared needles and blood
transfusion. The clinical significance of HTLV II is uncertain but HTLV I is associated with a
1 to 4% lifetime risk of developing adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATLL) or the chronic
neurological disease HTLV I related myelopathy (HAM) many decades after infection. The
combination of donor screening for antibodies to HTLV I and II plus leucodepletion of
cellular blood components has virtually eliminated transmission by transfusion in the UK.
57
58
1January 1996 (when dietary transmission of vCJD is assumed to have ceased) (2002)
59
Pathogen inactivation (PI) technologies for platelets and red cells, such as the use of lightactivated psoralens that kill organisms by damaging their DNA or RNA, are being
developed and have the potential to eliminate both bacterial and viral TTIs. At present, the
cost-effectiveness of PI is uncertain and early clinical studies of the currently licensed
system have raised concerns about its effect on platelet function.
Exclusion of blood donors who have received a blood transfusion in the UK since
1980(2004)
Importation of solvent detergent plasma for adult patients undergoing plasma exchange
60
62
Essentials
Transfusion alternatives were mostly developed to reduce blood use in surgery but
Transfusion alternatives have largely been developed to reduce donor red cell transfusion
in surgery, where they are most effective as part of a comprehensive patient blood
management programme (see Chapter 7). Many of these techniques have wider
application, ranging from traumatic and obstetric haemorrhage to patients who do not
accept blood transfusions. This chapter briefly describes the commonly available
transfusion alternatives and their rationale. Their use in specific clinical indications is
covered in Chapters 710 and 12.
63
or allow more donations to be collected. The Blood Safety and Quality Regulations (BSQR,
2005) require that donations for PAD must be performed in a licensed blood establishment,
rather than a routine hospital setting. The donations must be processed and tested in the
same way as donor blood and are subject to the same requirements for traceability.
Given the current remote risk of viral transfusion-transmitted infection by donor blood in
developed countries, the rationale, safety and cost-effectiveness of routine PAD has been
severely questioned (see 2007 British Committee for Standards in Haematology (BCSH)
Guidelines for Policies on Alternatives to Allogeneic Blood Transfusion. 1. Predeposit
Autologous Blood Donation and Transfusion http://www.bcshguidelines.com) and the
procedure is now rarely performed in the UK. Although PAD may reduce exposure to
donor blood, it does not reduce overall exposure to transfusion procedures or protect
against wrong blood into patient episodes due to identification errors at collection from the
blood bank or at the bedside. Indeed, the availability of autologous blood may increase the
risk of unnecessary transfusion. Most Jehovahs Witnesses will decline PAD (see Chapter 12).
Clinical trials of PAD are mainly small and of low quality and do not provide strong evidence
that the risks outweigh the benefits. The BCSH guideline on PAD only recommends its use
in exceptional circumstances, and lists the following indications for PAD:
Patients with rare blood groups or multiple blood group antibodies where compatible
64
within 4 hours of processing. The reinfusion bag should be labelled in the operating
theatre with the minimum patient identifiers derived from the patients ID band (UKCSAG
has developed a suitable label for this purpose). The red cells are transfused through a
200m screen filter, as in a standard blood administration set, except in those instances
where a leucodepletion filter is indicated (see below). The transfusion should be prescribed,
documented and the patient monitored in the same way as for any transfusion. Patients
undergoing elective procedures where ICS may be used should give informed consent
after provision of relevant information.
Indications for ICS in adults and children (for whom low-volume processing bowls are
available) are as follows:
Surgery where the anticipated blood loss is >20% of the patients estimated
bloodvolume.
Elective or emergency surgery in patients with risk factors for bleeding (including
65
PCS is relatively cheap, has the potential to reduce exposure to donor blood and is
acceptable to most Jehovahs Witnesses. It remains unclear whether it adds significantly
to a comprehensive blood conservation programme which includes preoperative
optimisation of Hb, haemostatic/antifibrinolytic measures during surgery and strict
postoperative transfusion thresholds.
66
of 1mg/kg/h.
Traumatic haemorrhage in adults (CRASH-2): 1g IV within 3 hours of the event followed
continues or recurs.
6.2.2 Aprotinin
Aprotinin inhibits many proteolytic enzymes and reduces fibrinolysis. It is bovine in origin
and severe allergic reactions, occasionally fatal, occur in up to 1 in 200 patients on first
exposure. Repeat administration is not advised within 12 months. Aprotinin is mainly used
in cardiac surgery where it appears to be more effective than tranexamic acid in reducing
blood loss and blood transfusion. However, several retrospective studies have shown an
increase in thromboembolic events, renal failure and overall mortality compared to other
antifibrinolytic drugs. It was temporarily withdrawn from prescription in 2007 and is now
recommended for use only in those patients with a particularly high risk of bleeding in
whom the benefits are believed to exceed the risks. Aprotinin is significantly more
expensive than tranexamic acid.
67
Higher doses were no more effective and it is not a substitute for coagulation factor
replacement. In view of this, the routine use of rFVIIa for non-haemophilia bleeding cannot
be recommended outside well-designed clinical trials, and hospitals should have clear
local protocols for its use (or not) in emergency settings.
Recommended dose
Epoietin alfa
Epoietin beta
Darbopoietin alfa
68
The dosage, scheduling and licensed indications for use in blood conservation vary
between different ESAs (Table 6.1) and prescribers should refer to the current Summary of
Product Characteristics (SPC) for each preparation, the British National Formulary and
expert haematological and pharmacological advice when developing local protocols. It is
usually necessary to co-administer oral or intravenous iron with Epo to support the
increase in red cell production.
renaldialysis).
As an alternative to blood transfusion when a rapid increase in Hb is required (e.g.
69
The newer preparations are more expensive and clinical experience is still limited.
Parenteral iron is contraindicated in the first trimester of pregnancy. The availability of
individual parenteral iron preparations varies between hospitals and they should be used
according to local guidelines and policies. Detailed information about dose and
administration is available in the individual Summary of Product Characteristics and the
British National Formulary (http://bnf.org/bnf).
70
7 Effective transfusion in
surgery and critical care
71
72
Essentials
Transfusion of blood according to evidence-based guidelines improves patient
laboratory tests.
The use of red cells in surgery has decreased but audits show many transfusions
are inappropriate and there is wide variation in practice between clinical teams.
Patient blood management programmes to improve surgical transfusion work
Blood transfusion can be life-saving and is a key component of many modern surgical and
medical interventions. However, blood components are expensive, may occasionally have
serious adverse effects and supplies are finite. Avoiding unnecessary and inappropriate
transfusions is both good for patients and essential to ensure blood supplies meet the
increasing demands of an ageing population. Clinical assessment, rather than laboratory
test results, should be the most important factor in the decision to transfuse and
evidence-based guidelines should be followed where available.
Surgical blood use in the UK has fallen by more than 20% since 2000, at least in part due
to the various Better Blood Transfusion initiatives and increasing evidence for the benefits
of restrictive transfusion policies. Less than 50% of red cell units are now given to surgical
patients. However, audits show that 1550% of red cell transfusions in a range of surgical
procedures are inappropriate and there is still significant variation in the use of blood for
the same operations. The fourth edition of the handbook defined good blood management
as management of the patient at risk of transfusion to minimise the need for allogeneic
transfusion, without detriment to the outcome. Multidisciplinary, evidence-based and
patient-centred programmes to achieve this, often called patient blood management
73
Patient blood management should start in primary care at the time of referral for surgery;
working closely with the preoperative assessment clinic at the hospital. It has three
keystrands:
Preoperative optimisation
Anaemia (and other relevant health problems) should be identified and treated in a
timely fashion before surgery.
Patients at increased risk of bleeding, especially those on anticoagulants or antiplatelet
drugs, should be recognised.
The use of blood conservation techniques in appropriate patients should be planned
inadvance.
Minimising blood loss at surgery
Drugs that increase bleeding risk should be withdrawn if safe to do so (discuss with
prescribing clinician).
Blood-sparing surgical and anaesthetic techniques should be used.
Antifibrinolytic drugs, tissue sealants and intraoperative cell salvage procedures should
individualpatients.
Minimise blood loss from blood tests.
Use postoperative red cell salvage and reinfusion where appropriate.
Prescribe iron and other stimulants to red cell production as needed.
Alternatives to donor blood transfusion and blood conservation techniques are detailed in
Chapter 6. For further useful information about transfusion alternatives see
http://www.nataonline.com/ and http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/.
74
effect of inflammation on red cell production. Intravenous iron preparations, which now
have a very low incidence of severe allergic reactions, may be used in patients intolerant of
oral iron and may also improve the Hb when administered postoperatively (see Chapter 6).
Erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs) such as recombinant erythropoietin are not costeffective in this setting.
cardiovasculardisease.
Patients who are not actively bleeding should be transfused with a single unit of red cells
and then reassessed before further blood is given.
75
7.1.1.3 Does the age of red cells affect outcome after surgery?
Retrospective observational studies have suggested that transfusing older stored red
cells may be associated with higher mortality in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and
cardiopulmonary bypass. This is controversial because of confounding factors and
conflicting results from other studies. Large randomised trials are in progress to answer
this important question. Unless or until there is prospective trial evidence of benefit,
specific selection of fresh red cells is not recommended.
50109 /L
100109 /L
Spinal anaesthesia
50109 /L
Epidural anaesthesia
80109 /L
Bone marrow aspiration and trephine biopsy can be performed in patients with severe
thrombocytopenia without platelet support if adequate local pressure is applied.
76
7.1.2.3 Warfarin
The current BCSH Guidelines on Oral Anticoagulation with Warfarin (http://www.
bcshguidelines.com) provide detailed discussion of perioperative management. Minor
dental procedures, joint aspiration, cataract surgery and gastrointestinal endoscopic
procedures (including biopsy) can be safely carried out on warfarin if the INR is within the
therapeutic range. More complex perioperative management should be guided by local
protocols and specialist haematological advice. Management options are summarised
inTable 7.2.
Table 7.2 Perioperative management of warfarin anticoagulation (adapted from BCSH
Guidelines on Oral Anticoagulation with Warfarin 4th edition, 2011, with permission)
Moderate/high risk of surgical haemorrhage,
low risk of thrombosis (e.g. lone atrial fibrillation)
13mg
Restart maintenance dose of warfarin on evening of
surgery if haemostasis secured.
Moderate/high risk of surgical haemorrhage,
high risk of thrombosis (e.g. mechanical heart
valve especially mitral, venous
thromboembolism within last 3 months)
Stop warfarin.
Give 2550IU/kg of four factor prothrombin complex
concentrate (PCC) and 5mg intravenous vitamin K.
(Fresh frozen plasma produces suboptimal
anticoagulation reversal and should only be used if
PCC is not available.)
77
7.1.4 Heparins
Unfractionated heparins (UFHs) have a short plasma half-life, but this is increased in the
presence of renal dysfunction. They can be administered by intravenous infusion or
subcutaneous injection and therapeutic dosing is usually adjusted by comparison of the
activated partial thromboplastin time with that of normal pooled plasma (APTT ratio). The
anticoagulant effect can be rapidly reversed by injected protamine sulphate (1mg reverses
80100 units of UFH, maximum recommended dose 50mg). Protamine can cause severe
allergic reactions and, in most situations, simply discontinuing the UFH is all that is necessary.
Low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) have a longer half-life, around 3 to 4 hours,
which is significantly increased in renal dysfunction. The duration of anticoagulant effect
depends on the particular LMWH and is only partially reversible by protamine. LMWHs
have a more targeted anticoagulant effect (mainly anti-Xa) than UFH, which may reduce
the risk of bleeding, and a lower risk of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) and
osteopenia. Administration is by subcutaneous injection once or twice daily. They can be
prescribed in a fixed or weight-related dose without monitoring in many clinical situations
and are convenient for self-administration. Consequently, LMWHs have largely replaced
UFH for many routine indications, including thromboprophylaxis for surgery. Perioperative
management of patients on heparins is summarised in Table 7.3.
Table 7.3 Perioperative management of patients on heparins (general guidance
only, see Summary of Product Characteristics for specific LMWH)
Unfractionated heparins
78
3 to 5 days before elective surgery because of the risk of perioperative bleeding but the
balance of risks and benefits depends on the indication for clopidogrel therapy. Aspirin
can be stopped at the time of surgery in cardiac surgery and continued in many surgical
procedures except in neurosurgery or operations on the inner eye.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) produce reversible platelet dysfunction
and have a short duration of action. Most guidelines suggest they are stopped at least 2 days
before surgery associated with significant bleeding risk. Studies in elective orthopaedic
surgery (mainly hip replacement) show increased blood loss and transfusion requirements
in those who continue NSAID therapy to the time of surgery. The optimum time to
discontinue NSAIDs prior to orthopaedic surgery is uncertain. Some guidelines have
suggested a 2-week interval but acknowledge the evidence base for this is weak.
Inhibitors of platelet surface receptors GPIIb/IIIa may be used in patients with acute
coronary syndromes. Abciximab inhibits platelet function for 12 to 24 hours after
administration whereas eptifibatide and tirofibam have a short half-life of 1.5 to 2.5 hours.
Invasive surgery should be delayed for 1224 hours if possible. The drug effect is partially
reversible by platelet transfusion.
79
80
Figure 7.1Guidelines for red cell transfusion in critical care (adapted by courtesy
of British Committee for Standards in Haematology)
Is the patient anaemic and
haemodynamically stable?
Severe sepsis
Early (<6h from onset)
Target Hb 90100 g/L
if evidence of tissue hypoxia
Yes
No
DO NOT
TRANSFUSE
Yes
No
Ischaemic heart disease
General critical care
Use a default Hb trigger of <70 g/L
with a target range 7090 g/L
81
Table 7.4 Suggested indications for platelet transfusion in adult critical care
Indication
Not indicated
Threshold 20109 /L
Maintain >50109 /L
70kg adult)
82
A pragmatic clinically based definition is bleeding which leads to a systolic blood pressure
of less than 90mm Hg or a heart rate of more than 110 beats per minute.
Early recognition and intervention is essential for survival. The immediate priorities are to
control bleeding (surgery and interventional radiology) and maintain vital organ perfusion
by transfusing blood and other fluids through a wide-bore intravenous catheter. Recent
research has focused on major traumatic haemorrhage, influenced by the increased
survival of military casualties using damage control resuscitation and early transfusion of
fresh plasma and red cells (see below).
Successful management of major haemorrhage requires a protocol-driven multidisciplinary
team approach with involvement of medical, anaesthetic and surgical staff of sufficient
seniority and experience, underpinned by clear lines of communication between clinicians and
the transfusion laboratory. Useful information on the development of major haemorrhage
protocols can be found on the UK Blood Transfusion and Tissue Transplantation Services
website (http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/Index.aspx?pageid=7675&publication=RTC)
and the Association of Anaesthetists guideline on management of massive haemorrhage
(http://www.aagbi.org/sites/default/files/massive_haemorrhage_2010_0.pdf).
Major haemorrhage protocols should identify the key roles of team leader (often the most
senior doctor directing resuscitation of the patient) and coordinator responsible for
communicating with laboratories and other support services to prevent time-wasting and
often confusing duplicate calls. In an emergency situation it is essential to ensure correct
transfusion identification procedures for patients, samples and blood components are
performed (see Chapter 4) and an accurate record is kept of all blood components
transfused. Training of clinical and laboratory staff and regular fire drills to test the
protocol and ensure the rapid delivery of all blood components are essential.
An example of a practical algorithm for the transfusion management of major haemorrhage
is given in Figure 7.2.
83
Figure 7.2 Algorithm for the management of major haemorrhage (adapted from
the BCSH Practical Guideline for the Management of Those With, or At Risk of
Major Haemorrhage (2013) with permission)
Recognise blood loss and trigger major blood loss protocol
If bleeding continues
GIVE
Falling Hb
Red cells
PT ratio >1.5
Cryoprecipitate (2 pools)
Platelets <75109 /L
Platelets 1 ATD
84
The use of intraoperative cell salvage devices reduces the need for donor red cells in
appropriate cases. When bleeding is controlled and the patient enters the critical care unit,
a restrictive red cell transfusion policy is probably appropriate.
Cryoprecipitate
2 five-unit pools
Fibrinogen concentrate
a
3 to 4g
The early transfusion of FFP in a fixed ratio to red cells (shock packs) in traumatic
haemorrhage, to reverse coagulopathy and reduce bleeding, has been extrapolated from
military to civilian practice but the true value of this approach is uncertain. Retrospective
studies are confounded by survivorship bias (the most severely injured patients do not
survive long enough to be transfused) and the non-military trauma population is older and
less fit. Transfusion policy is just one component of an integrated, multidisciplinary
85
86
Once the patient is haemodynamically stable, and in patients with less severe initial
haemorrhage, over-transfusion may increase the risk of recurrent bleeding (probably by
increasing portal venous pressure) and increase mortality. In a recent large randomised
trial in patients with severe (but not massive) upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage in Spain
(Villanueva et al., 2013), mortality and re-bleeding was lower in patients randomised to a
restrictive rather than a liberal red cell transfusion policy (transfusion trigger 70 or 90g/L).
There were more adverse events (reactions and circulatory overload) in the liberal group.
Of note, the trial excluded patients with a history of ischaemic heart disease, stroke or
vascular disease and the results may not be generalisable, especially to older patients.
Transfusion strategy in AUGIB is the subject of a current UK multicentre randomised trial
(TRIGGER http://www.nhsbt.nhs.uk/trigger) which is recruiting unselected cases in
sixhospitals.
87
8 Effective transfusion
in medical patients
89
90
Essentials
Inappropriate blood transfusions in medical patients are common and may
causeharm.
Blood transfusion should not be performed where there are appropriate alternatives
The decision to transfuse, and how much, should be based on clinical assessment and
clearly defined objectives, such as reduction in fatigue, not on the Hb level alone.
Evidence-based guidelines improve the balance between efficacy and safety as well as
improving the economy of blood use. Alternatives to donor blood should be used where
appropriate. The introduction of computerised ordering systems for blood components
offers the opportunity to link requests to real time laboratory data and provide on-screen
decision support to the prescriber based on best evidence for the clinical indication.
Inappropriate transfusions have been significantly reduced by the introduction of such
systems in certain US hospitals (Murphy et al., 2013).
The biggest medical users of blood are haematology, oncology, gastrointestinal medicine
(including liver disease) and renal medicine (National Comparative Audit of Blood
Transfusion 2011 Audit of Use of Blood in Adult Medical Patients Part 1 http://hospital.
blood.co.uk/library/pdf/Medical_Use_Audit_Part_1_Report.pdf). The median age of
transfused patients in this audit was 73 years and nearly half were transfused outside
current national guidelines. It was found that 20% of patients were transfused despite
91
8 Effective transfusion
More than 50% of red cells in the UK are transfused for non-surgical indications. The
recipients are often elderly and have an increased risk of transfusion complications such
as transfusion-associated circulatory overload (TACO). Although overall red cell demand has
fallen in the UK in the last decade, largely because of a reduction in surgical transfusions,
there has been a continuing rise in requests for platelets and fresh frozen plasma (FFP).
having a treatable cause for anaemia, such as iron deficiency; 29% were transfused at an
Hb concentration above the predefined trigger; and patients were often transfused up to
a higher than necessary Hb concentration (especially patients of low body weight).
92
93
8 Effective transfusion
The major cause of renal anaemia is deficiency of erythropoietin (Epo), which is produced
in the kidneys. Contributing factors include shortened red cell lifespan, inflammation,
impaired release of iron from body stores and blood loss during haemodialysis. Most
patients with severe CKD and symptomatic anaemia respond well to treatment with ESAs
such as rHuEpo (see Chapter 6) and these can eliminate the need for blood transfusion.
Parenteral iron supplements are often required to produce a full response. Because of the
risk of hypertension and thrombotic complications with higher haematocrit levels, patients
must be carefully monitored and the ESA dose adjusted to obtain maximum improvement
in quality of life while avoiding Hb levels above 120g/L. Successful renal transplantation
corrects the anaemia of CKD.
with the transplanted kidney leading to higher rates of acute rejection and poorer longterm graft survival. The risk of alloimmunisation has reduced since the introduction of
universal leucodepletion of blood components and the use of ESA in CKD.
ABO-incompatible renal transplants have traditionally been avoided because of a high
incidence of failure due to hyperacute graft rejection. To increase the pool of potential
donors, pre-transplant protocols that combine plasma exchange with immunosuppressive
therapy and immunoadsorption columns to remove ABO antibodies from the patients
blood are proving increasingly successful.
Irradiated cellular blood components are currently recommended for solid organ transplant
patients who have received alemtuzumab (anti-CD52) as immunosuppressive therapy
(see section 8.7).
8.6 Haemoglobinopathies
Haemoglobin (Hb) molecules consist of four haem (iron-containing) complexes and four globin
chains (two and two non- chains Table 8.1). The haem component carries oxygen
and the globin chains contribute to the stability and oxygen affinity of the Hb molecule.
Table 8.1 Normal adult haemoglobins
Haemoglobin
Globin chains
% of total Hb in adult
2/2
>95%
A2
2/2
<3.5%
2/2
<1%
to reduced levels of HbA, the main adult Hb. They are very diverse disorders at the
genetic and clinical levels.
94
Abnormal haemoglobins A new Hb variant results from mutations in the genes for
or globin chains that alter the stability or other functions of the Hb molecule (e.g.
sickle Hb (HbS)).
8 Effective transfusion
Vaso-occlusive episodes causing recurrent acute painful sickle cell crises and
95
Patients with SCD are predominantly of Black African descent, although the sickle (HbS)
gene also occurs in populations of Mediterranean, Arab and South Asian origin. Most
patients with severe SCD are homozygous for the HbS gene (HbS/S) but combinations
can occur with other haemoglobinopathies to produce sickling syndromes of variable
severity such as sickle--thalassaemia, HbS/C or HbS/E. There are more than 12500
patients with SCD in the UK.
Exchange transfusion
Acute stroke
Severe sepsis
96
Table 8.3 Possible indications for elective red cell transfusion in severe sickle
celldisease
Supported by high-grade evidence from
clinical trials
Leg ulceration
Pulmonary hypertension
97
8 Effective transfusion
It is often difficult to source fully compatible red cells in patients with multiple alloantibodies,
especially when blood is required urgently. In that situation, the problem should be
discussed with experts in transfusion medicine and blood group serology at the blood
transfusion service, who will advise on the selection of the safest blood group combinations
available in stock, taking into account the patients current and historical antibodies and
the urgency of transfusion. They will also initiate a search for fully compatible donations and
advise on the management of possible haemolytic reactions. Many non-ABO antibodies
typically cause delayed extravascular red cell destruction, which is less severe than ABO
haemolysis. If the transfusion of red cells with a clinically significant incompatibility is
unavoidable the clinical team should ensure the patient is adequately hydrated, and careful
monitoring for evidence of haemolysis, including delayed reactions, is essential (see
Chapter 5). If severe haemolysis occurs, or if the patient has had previous haemolytic
reactions, options for treatment or prophylaxis include high-dose corticosteroids and
intravenous immunoglobulin.
be diagnosed as an acute sickle cell crisis. Further transfusion may worsen the haemolysis
and should be avoided if possible. Treatment with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin
has been effective in some reported cases but the benefits of corticosteroids are uncertain.
98
99
8 Effective transfusion
Non-immunological causes
Infection
Platelet autoantibodies
Drug-dependent antibodies
Splenomegaly/hypersplenism
Immune complexes
Platelet refractoriness due to human leucocyte antigen (HLA) alloimmunisation has been
less common since universal leucodepletion of blood components was introduced. The
typical patient is now a female sensitised by previous pregnancy. If a non-immunological
cause has been excluded, the patient should be screened for HLA antibodies after
discussion with a transfusion medicine specialist. The presence of HLA antibodies does
not prove immunological refractoriness but the response to platelet transfusion from
donors matched, as closely as possible, for the patients HLA-A and HLA-B antigens
should be assessed. The UK Transfusion Services have panels of HLA-typed donors.
ABO-compatible platelets should be used wherever possible and HLA-matched platelet
transfusions should be irradiated to prevent transfusion-associated graft-versus-host
disease. Immediate (10 to 60 minutes) and 24-hour post-transfusion platelet increments
should be measured. If a satisfactory response is seen, HLA-matched platelet transfusions
should be continued as long as compatible donors are available. HLA antibodies may
reduce or disappear during treatment and it may be helpful to repeat the HLA-antibody
screen monthly during treatment. If there is no response to HLA-matched platelets it is
reasonable to screen for human platelet antigen (HPA) and other less common antibodies
after specialist advice.
100
Bidirectional ABO
incompatibility
Donor
Recipient
Red cells
Platelets
FFP
AB
AB
AB
Aa
AB
AB
Ba
AB
AB
AB
AB
Aa
AB
AB
AB
AB
AB
Once conversion to donor blood group is complete, components of that group can be
given. In both major and minor RhD mismatch, RhD negative red cells and platelets are
given post-transplant. If, for reasons of availability, RhD positive platelets have to be given
to unsensitised RhD negative recipients, 250IU of anti-D immunoglobulin subcutaneously
will cover up to five adult therapeutic doses of platelets over a 5-week period.
101
8 Effective transfusion
Irradiated components are recommended for newer purine analogues and related compounds, such as
bendamustine, until further data are available
Irradiated components are also recommended for solid organ transplant patients receiving alemtuzumab
102
Patients at risk of TA-GvHD should be given clear written information. Patient information
leaflets, cards and warning stickers for the hospital notes are available from the UK Blood
Services. SHOT annual reports show that failure to prescribe or administer irradiated
components is a common cause of incorrect blood component transfused incidents.
Many of these are due to poor communication between clinical teams, transfusion
laboratories and shared-care hospitals. SHOT (http://www.shotuk.org) has made a series
of recommendations concerning better clinical communication and documentation, and
improved laboratory and clinical information systems (including IT links with pharmacy and
diagnostic services), which should be incorporated into local policies and regularly audited.
Human normal immunoglobulin products are manufactured from large pools of donor plasma.
All the products used in the UK are imported as a variant CreutzfeldtJakob disease
(vCJD) risk-reduction measure. The two main uses for IVIg are as replacement therapy in
primary or acquired antibody deficiency disorders and as immunomodulatory agents in
patients with autoimmune or inflammatory conditions. Because of limitations on supply of
IVIg, the UK Departments of Health have commissioned evidence-based clinical guidelines
to prioritise its use. Tables 8.8 and 8.9 are based on the 2011 update of these guidelines.
103
8 Effective transfusion
Primary immunodeficiencies
Thymoma with immunodeficiency
HSC transplant in primary immunodeficiencies
Specific antibody deficiency
Haematology
Alloimmune thrombocytopenia
(feto-maternal/neonatal)
Haemolytic disease of the newborn
Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) acute
and persistent
Neurology
Others
Kawasaki disease
Toxic epidermal necrolysis
Haematology
Neurology
Others
104
9 EFFECTIVE transfusion in
obstetric practice
105
106
Essentials
Inappropriate transfusions during pregnancy and the postpartum period expose the
the late second trimester. Red cell mass only increases by 2530%, resulting in a fall in
Hb concentration (physiological anaemia of pregnancy).
Up to 10% of healthy pregnant women have a count below the non-pregnant reference
range of 150400109/L at term (gestational thrombocytopenia). The count rarely falls
below 100109/L and there is no increase in bleeding risk.
107
mother to the risk of haemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN) in
subsequent pregnancies.
Prevention and treatment of anaemia in pregnancy (most commonly due to iron
deficiency) avoids unnecessary blood transfusion.
A blood count should be checked at the antenatal booking visit and at 28 weeks
(allowing sufficient time to treat iron deficiency before delivery).
Oral iron replacement is appropriate for most patients, but intravenous iron (after the
first trimester) may produce a more rapid response and should be used in women
intolerant of oral iron.
Transfusion is rarely required in haemodynamically stable pregnant women with
Hb>70 or 80g/L unless there is active (or a high risk of) bleeding.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) seronegative red cells should be provided for elective
transfusions in pregnancy but standard, leucodepleted units may be used in an
emergency to avoid delay.
Major obstetric haemorrhage remains an important cause of maternal death.
Successful management depends on well-rehearsed multidisciplinary protocols,
rapid access to red cells (including emergency group O negative units) and excellent
communication with the transfusion laboratory. Access to cell salvage reduces use
of donor blood and early administration of tranexamic acid may reduce mortality.
Pregnancies potentially affected by HDFN should be managed by specialist teams
with facilities for early diagnosis, intrauterine transfusion and support of highdependency neonates.
Alloimmunisation of RhD negative women is the most important cause of HDFN. It
was a major cause of perinatal mortality before routine postnatal anti-D Ig
prophylaxis was introduced.
Women may be alloimmunised by feto-maternal haemorrhage during pregnancy or
at delivery, or by blood transfusion.
Anti-D Ig should be administered within 72 hours of delivery of a RhD positive baby
or a potentially sensitising event in pregnancy in accordance with national guidelines.
The incidence of HDFN has been further reduced by the addition of routine
antenatal anti-D prophylaxis (RAADP).
Many coagulation factors, including plasma fibrinogen and Factor VIIIc, are increased in
normal pregnancy and the anticoagulant factor Protein S is reduced. This contributes
to the increased risk of thrombotic complications in pregnancy.
108
Blood flow to the uterus is around 700mL/minute at term and bleeding can be dramatic
and rapidly fatal. Risk factors for obstetric haemorrhage include placenta praevia, placental
abruption and postpartum haemorrhage (most commonly due to uterine atony). Obstetric
haemorrhage is a major problem in less developed countries, responsible for half of the
approximately 500000 maternal deaths each year across the world. Major haemorrhage
remains an important cause of maternal mortality in the UK, with an incidence of 3.7 per 1000
births and nine deaths in 20062008. Analysis by the UK Centre for Maternal and Child
Enquiries (CMACE) (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02847.x/pdf)
shows that the management of fatal cases was often suboptimal with underestimation of
the degree of haemorrhage and poor team working. The Centre emphasises the need for:
109
the antifibrinolytic agent, tranexamic acid, can significantly reduce mortality in major
obstetric haemorrhage and this is being explored in a large international randomised trial
(the WOMAN trial http://www.thewomantrial.lshtm.ac.uk/).
The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists has produced guidelines on the
prevention and management of postpartum haemorrhage (http://www.rcog.org.uk/
womens-health/clinical-guidance/prevention-and-management-postpartum-haemorrhagegreen-top-52). Obstetric and anaesthetic staff of appropriate seniority must be involved
and access to expert haematological advice is important. Transfusion support for patients
with major obstetric haemorrhage should follow the basic principles discussed in Chapter7.
There must be rapid access to compatible red cells and blood components, including
emergency group O RhD negative blood. Use of intraoperative cell salvage (ICS) by teams
experienced in the technique reduces exposure to donor red cells and can be life-saving,
especially in women who decline allogeneic blood transfusion. Use of ICS in obstetrics is
endorsed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Salvaged blood
should be transfused through a leucodepletion filter (see Chapter 6).
The dose of tranexamic acid used in the WOMAN trial is 1g by intravenous injection as
soon as possible; a second dose is given if bleeding persists after 30 minutes or recurs
within the first 24 hours.
110
clinical advice.
Determining the fathers phenotype helps to predict the likelihood of a fetus carrying the relevant red
fetal DNA in the mothers circulation. This is currently highly sensitive for RhD, C, c, E, e and Kell.
Antenatal patients with anti-D, anti-c or anti-K should have regular repeat testing during the second
trimester to monitor the antibody concentration:
Usually every 4 weeks to 28 weeks gestation then every 2 weeks to term.
Referral to a fetal medicine specialist is recommended once anti-D levels are >4IU/mL, anti-c
>7.5IU/mL and in any woman with anti-K (as the severity of fetal anaemia is unpredictable).
All other women (both RhD positive and negative) should have repeat antibody screening at 28 weeks
gestation (prior to RAADP) to exclude late development of red cell alloantibodies.
RhD negative mothers can also produce anti-RhD in response to potentially sensitising
events that may cause feto-maternal haemorrhage (FMH) during pregnancy or by blood
transfusion. The BCSH Guideline for the Use of Anti-D Immunoglobulin for the Prevention
of Haemolytic Disease of the Fetus and Newborn 2013 lists the following as potentially
sensitising events in pregnancy:
111
1220 weeks
20+ weeks
surgical intervention
termination of pregnancy
(surgical or medical)
unusually heavy bleeding
112
RAADP should be given even if the woman has received anti-D Ig prophylaxis for a
potentially sensitising event earlier in the pregnancy. The transfusion laboratory should be
informed of the administration of RAADP in case the woman requires pre-transfusion
testing. It is not possible to differentiate between prophylactic and immune (allo-) anti-D
in maternal blood in laboratory tests.
113
10
10 10 Effective transfusion
inpaediatric practice
115
116
Essentials
Paediatric transfusion is a complex area of medicine covering a wide age range from
intrauterine life to young adults. The prescriber must balance the risks and benefits of
transfusion in each age group and be aware of the indications for special components.
However, compared to adult practice there is a relative lack of high-quality research to
inform evidence-based guidelines. The UK National Comparative Audit of the Use of Red
117
The potential risks and benefits must always be considered when making the
118
119
Indirect antiglobulin test (IAT) crossmatch compatible with the mothers plasma
120
First 24 hours
On oxygen/CPAP
Off oxygen
<120
<120
<100
<120
<100
<100
<100
<95
<7585 depending
on clinical situation
<85
121
Several randomised controlled trials have addressed the risks and benefits of liberal or
restrictive red cell transfusion policies in very low birth weight infants. A systematic review by
the Cochrane Collaboration in 2011 found a modest reduction in exposure to transfusion
in the restrictive transfusion groups and no significant difference in mortality, major
morbidities or survival without major morbidity. The approximate lower limits used to
define a restrictive transfusion policy in these trials are shown in Table 10.5. Although
many experts now favour a restrictive transfusion policy (Venkatesh et al., 2013), it is
important to note the Cochrane Review comment that the safe lower limits for haemoglobin
transfusion thresholds remain undefined, and there is still uncertainty regarding the
benefits of maintaining a higher level. Further large clinical trials are advocated, especially
to address the issues of longer term (including neurodevelopmental) outcomes and costeffectiveness. Most local guidelines are closer to the restrictive thresholds used in the trials.
Table 10.5 Approximate capillary Hb transfusion thresholds used for restrictive
transfusion policies in studies evaluated by the Cochrane Review
Postnatal age
Respiratory support
No respiratory support
Week 1
115g/L
100g/L
Week 2
100g/L
85g/L
Week 3
85g/L
75g/L
Many neonatal red cell transfusions are given to replace losses from frequent blood
sampling. This can be reduced by avoiding non-essential tests, using low-volume sample
tubes validated near patient testing, micro-techniques in the laboratory, and non-invasive
monitoring where possible. Donor exposure can also be reduced by allocating single
donor units, split into paedipacks, to babies predicted to need more than one transfusion
episode within the expiry date of the donation. This requires close collaboration between
the clinical team and blood transfusion laboratory.
The specifications for neonatal/infant small-volume red cells for transfusion are shown in
Table 10.6. The typical transfusion volume is 1020mL/kg (higher end of dose for severe
anaemia or bleeding) administered at 5mL/kg/h. Top-up transfusions in excess of
20mL/kg are not recommended because of the risk of transfusion-associated circulatory
overload (TACO).
During the first 4 months of life ABO antigens may be poorly expressed on red cells and
the corresponding ABO antibodies may not have yet developed (making confirmation by
reverse grouping unreliable). Maternal IgG ABO antibodies may be detected in neonatal
plasma. Wherever possible, samples from both the mother and infant should be tested for
ABO and RhD grouping, an antibody screen should be performed on the larger maternal
sample, and a direct antiglobulin test (DAT) on the infants sample. Because of the
significant risk of wrong blood in tube errors due to misidentification, the infants blood
group should be verified on two separate samples (one of which can be a cord blood
sample) as recommended for adult patients, providing this does not delay the emergency
issue of blood. If there are no atypical maternal antibodies and the infants DAT is negative,
top-up transfusions can be given without further testing during the first 4 months of life.
Details of pretransfusion testing in neonates and infants are given in the 2013 BCSH
guidelines for pre-transfusion compatibility procedures in blood transfusion laboratories
122
Platelets <5010 /L
Platelets <100109 /L
123
Sick neonates in intensive care are commonly transfused with fresh frozen plasma (FFP),
which carries a significant risk of serious acute transfusion reactions (see Chapter 5). The
2009 National Comparative Audit of the use of FFP (http://hospital.blood.co.uk/safe_use/
clinical_audit/national_comparative/index.asp) confirmed that, contrary to published
guidelines, 42% of FFP transfusions to infants were given prophylactically in the absence
of bleeding, on the basis of abnormal clotting tests. BCSH guidelines recommend that FFP
should be used for:
Vitamin K deficiency with bleeding
DIC with bleeding
Congenital coagulation factor deficiencies where no factor concentrate is available
(Factor V deficiency)
The dose of FFP is usually 1215mL/kg. The degree of correction is unpredictable and
clotting tests should be repeated after administration.
FFP should not be used as routine prophylaxis against peri/intraventricular haemorrhage in
preterm neonates (evidence from a randomised controlled trial), as a volume replacement
solution, or just to correct abnormalities of the clotting screen.
Cryoprecipitate is used as a more concentrated source of fibrinogen than FFP and is
primarily indicated when the fibrinogen level is <0.81.0g/L in the presence of bleeding
from acquired or congenital hypofibrinogenaemia. The usual dose is 510mL/kg.
FFP for neonates (and all patients born on or after 1 January 1996) is imported from
countries with a low risk of vCJD and is pathogen-inactivated. Methylene blue inactivation
is used by the UK Blood Services and commercial pooled solvent detergent treated FFP is
also available. It should be ABO identical with the recipient or group AB (group O FFP
should only be given to neonates of group O).
124
125
Apheresis platelets should be used for all children <16 years old to reduce donor
developed for adult practice, although a higher rate of bleeding in children with
haematological malignancies has been reported. The 2004 BCSH Transfusion Guidelines
for Neonates and Older Children recommend a standard platelet transfusion threshold of
10109/L in non-infected, clinically stable children. A threshold of 20109/L is recommended
in the presence of severe mucositis, DIC or anticoagulant therapy. Patients with DIC in
association with induction therapy for leukaemia and those with extremely high white cell
counts may be transfused at 2040109/L and a similar level is appropriate for performance
of lumbar puncture or insertion of a central venous line.
126
11
11 11 Therapeutic
apheresis
127
128
11 Therapeutic apheresis
Essentials
Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) using an automated cell separator removes
thrombocytopenic purpura.
TPE is only indicated for conditions where there is good evidence it is effective and
129
11 Therapeutic apheresis
Table 11.1 ASFA Category I indications for therapeutic plasma exchange (first-line
therapy based on strong research evidence)
Speciality
Condition
Neurology
Haematology
Renal
Metabolic
130
11 Therapeutic apheresis
Condition
Neurology
Haematology
Metabolic
Refsums disease
131
11 Therapeutic apheresis
Immunological
132
12
12 12 Management of
patients who do not
accept transfusion
133
134
Essentials
Respect the values, beliefs and cultural backgrounds of all patients.
Anxiety about the risks of transfusion can be allayed by frank and sympathetic
blood and primary blood components. Individuals vary in their choice and it is
important to clearly establish the preference of each patient.
Advance Decision Documents must be respected.
No one can give consent on behalf of a patient with mental capacity.
Emergency or critically ill patients with temporary incapacity must be given lifesaving transfusion unless there is clear evidence of prior refusal such as a valid
Advance Decision Document.
Where the parents or legal guardians of a child under 16 refuse essential blood
transfusion a Specific Issue Order (or national equivalent) can be rapidly obtained
from a court.
Every patient has the right to be treated with respect and staff must be sensitive to their
individual needs, acknowledging their values, beliefs and cultural background.
Some patients, their family members or friends are very worried about the risks of blood
transfusion, especially transfusion-transmitted infection, based on reports in the media or
anecdotal experience. Others decline transfusion of certain blood products based on their
religious beliefs.
135
Nearly all Jehovahs Witnesses refuse transfusions of whole blood (including preoperative
autologous donation) and the primary blood components red cells, platelets, white cells
and unfractionated plasma. Many Witnesses accept the transfusion of derivatives of
primary blood components such as albumin solutions, cryoprecipitate, clotting factor
concentrates (including fibrinogen concentrate) and immunoglobulins. There is usually no
objection to intraoperative cell salvage (ICS), apheresis, haemodialysis, cardiac bypass or
normovolaemic haemodilution providing the equipment is primed with non-blood fluids.
Recombinant products, such as erythropoiesis stimulating agents (e.g. RHuEpo) and
granulocyte colony stimulating factors (e.g. G-CSF or GM-CSF) are acceptable, as are
pharmacological agents such as intravenous iron or tranexamic acid.
Jehovahs Witnesses frequently carry a signed and witnessed Advance Decision
Document listing the blood products and autologous procedures that are, or are not,
acceptable to them. A copy of this should be placed in the patient record and the
limitations on treatment made clear to all members of the clinical team. It is appropriate to
have a frank, confidential discussion with the patient about the potential risks of their
decision and the possible alternatives to transfusion, but the freely expressed wish of a
competent adult must always be respected. Where appropriate, the patient and clinical
team may find it helpful to contact the local Hospital Liaison Committee for Jehovahs
Witnesses (contact details should be in the relevant local hospital policy document but can
be obtained through the UK central coordinating office, Hospital Information Services
tel02089062211 [24 hours] or via [email protected]).
Useful resources to assist in the management of patients who refuse blood
transfusionsinclude:
London Regional Transfusion Committee Care Pathways for the Management of
136
In the case of critically ill patients with temporary incapacity, for example altered
consciousness after trauma, clinicians must give life-saving treatment, including blood
transfusion, unless there is clear evidence of prior refusal such as an Advance Decision
Document. The patient record should document the indication for transfusion and the
patient should be informed of the transfusion when mental capacity is regained (and their
future wishes should be respected).
Where the parents or legal guardians of a child under 16 refuse blood transfusion (or other
medical intervention) that, in the opinion of the treating clinician, is life-saving or essential
for the well-being of the child, a Specific Issue Order (or national equivalent) can be rapidly
obtained from a court. All hospitals should have policies that describe how to do this,
without delay, 24 hours a day.
137
A
13 Appendices
139
140
UK Blood Services
NHS Blood and Transplant http://www.nhsbt.nhs.uk
Northern Ireland Blood Transfusion Service http://www.nibts.org
Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service http://www.scotblood.co.uk
Welsh Blood Service http://www.welsh-blood.org.uk
Haemovigilance
Serious Hazards of Transfusion (SHOT) http://www.shotuk.org
Miscellaneous
British National Formulary http://bnf.org/bnf
LearnBloodTransfusion an interactive e-learning resource for hospital staff
developed by the Better Blood Transfusion Continuing Education Programme
http://www.learnbloodtransfusion.org.uk
141
References
Note: references are cited in the order in which they appear in the text.
Chapter 1
NHS Blood and Transplant Transfusion 10 commandments bookmark
http://hospital.blood.co.uk/library/pdf/10_commandments_bookmark_2011_07.pdf
Chapter 2
Milkins C, Berryman J, Cantwell C, Elliott C, Haggas R, Jones J, Rowley M, Williams M,
Win N (2012). Guidelines for Pre-Transfusion Compatibility Procedures in Blood Transfusion
Laboratories. British Committee for Standards in Haematology
(http://www.bcshguidelines.com); Transfusion Medicine 2013, 23: 335.
Chapter 3
Guidelines for the Blood Transfusion Services in the UK, 8th edition (Red Book).
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/index.aspx?Publication=RB
Chapter 4
Guideline on the Administration of Blood Components (2009). British Committee for
Standards in Haematology. http://www.bcshguidelines.com
Green J, Pirie L (2009). A Framework to Support Nurses and Midwives Making the Clinical
Decision and Providing the Written Instruction for Blood Component Transfusion.
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/docs/pdfs/BTFramework-final010909.pdf
Murphy M, Wallis J, Birchall J (2013). Indication Codes for Transfusion An Audit Tool.
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/docs/pdfs/nbtc_2014_04_recs_indication_
codes_2013.pdf
Chapter 5
Serious Hazards of Transfusion (SHOT) Annual reports and summaries.
http://www.shotuk.org/shot-reports
Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), Serious Adverse Blood
Reactions and Events (SABRE). http://www.mhra.gov.uk/Safetyinformation/
Reportingsafetyproblems/Blood/
Tinegate H, Birchall J, Gray A, Haggas R, Massey E, Norfolk D, Pinchon D, Sewell C, Wells
A, Allard S (2012). Guideline on the investigation and management of acute transfusion
reactions. Prepared by the BCSH Blood Transfusion Task Force. British Journal of
Haematology 159: 143153. http://www.bcshguidelines.com
142
Boulton FE, James V (2007). Guidelines for policies on alternatives to allogeneic blood
transfusion. 1. Predeposit autologous blood donation and transfusion. British Committee
for Standards in Haematology (http://www.bcshguidelines.com); Transfusion Medicine
17: 354365.
UK Cell Salvage Action Group (in Better Blood Transfusion Toolkit).
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/Index.aspx?Publication=BBT&Section=22&pageid=7507
NICE Clinical Guideline (2005). Intraoperative Blood Cell Salvage in Obstetrics (IPG144).
http://guidance.nice.org.uk/IPG144
Carless PA, Henry DA, Moxey AJ, OConnell D, Brown T, Fergusson DA (2010). The
Cochrane Library: Cell Salvage for Minimising Perioperative Allogeneic Blood Transfusion
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD001888.pub4/abstract
Ker K, Roberts I, Perel P, Murphy M (2012). Effect of tranexamic acid on surgical bleeding:
systematic review and cumulative meta-analysis. British Medical Journal 344: e3054.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e3054
Shakur H, Roberts I, Bautista R et al. (2010). Effects of tranexamic acid on death, vascular
occlusive events, and blood transfusion in trauma patients with significant haemorrhage
(CRASH-2): a randomised, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 376: 2332.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20554319?dopt=Abstract&access_num=
20554319&link_type=MED
Tranexamic acid for the treatment of postpartum haemorrhage: an international
randomised, double blind, placebo controlled trial (WOMAN trial).
http://www.thewomantrial.lshtm.ac.uk
Simpson E, Lin Y, Stanworth S, Birchall J, Doree C, Hyde C (2012). The Cochrane Library:
Recombinant Factor VIIa for the Prevention and Treatment of Bleeding in Patients without
Haemophilia. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD005011.pub4/abstract
Chapter 7
Patient Blood Management
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/Index.aspx?Publication=NTC&Section=
27&pageid=7728
National Blood Authority, Australia. Patient Blood Management Guidelines.
http://www.nba.gov.au/guidelines/review.html
Makris M, Van Veen JJ, Tait CR, Mumford AD, Laffan M (2012). Guideline on the
management of bleeding in patients on antithrombotic agents. British Committee for
Standards in Haematology British Journal of Haematology 160: 3546.
http://www.bcshguidelines.com/documents/bleeding_on_antithrombotics_Makris_2012.pdf
143
Appendices
Chapter 6
Chapter 8
Murphy MF, Waters JH, Wood EM, Yazer MH (2013). Transfusing blood safely and
appropriately. British Medical Journal 347, f4303.
National Comparative Audit of Blood Transfusion (2011). Audit of Use of Blood in Adult
Medical Patients Part 1 http://hospital.blood.co.uk/library/pdf/Medical_Use_Audit_
Part_1_Report.pdf
Rizzo JD, Brouwers M, Hurley P et al. (2010). ASCOASH clinical practice guideline update
on the use of epoetin and darbepoetin in adult patients with cancer. Journal of Clinical
Oncology 28: 49965010. http://www.asco.org/institute-quality/asco-ash-clinical-practiceguideline-update-use-epoetin-and-darbepoetin-adult
UK Thalassaemia Society. Standards for the Clinical Care of Children and Adults with
Thalassaemia in the UK. http://www.hbpinfo.com/ukts-standards-2008.pdf
NHS Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia Screening Programme.
http://sct.screening.nhs.uk/cms.php?folder=2493
144
Sickle Cell Society (2013). Standards for the clinical care of adults with sickle cell disease
in the UK. http://www.sicklecellsociety.org/app/webroot/files/files/CareBook.pdf
Chapter 9
UK Guidelines on the Management of Iron Deficiency in Pregnancy (2011).
British Committee for Standards in Haematology. http://www.bcshguidelines.com
Centre for Maternal and Child Enquiries (CMACE). Saving Mothers Lives. Reviewing
Maternal Deaths to Make Motherhood Safer: 20062008.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02847.x/pdf
Tranexamic acid for the treatment of postpartum haemorrhage: an international
randomised, double blind, placebo controlled trial (WOMAN trial).
http://www.thewomantrial.lshtm.ac.uk
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (2011). Postpartum Haemorrhage:
Prevention and Management (Green Top 52). http://www.rcog.org.uk/womens-health/
clinical-guidance/prevention-and-management-postpartum-haemorrhage-green-top-52
Guideline for Blood Grouping and Antibody Testing in Pregnancy (2006). British Committee
for Standards in Haematology (a revised version is in preparation).
http://www.bcshguidelines.com/documents/antibody_testing_pregnancy_bcsh_07062006.pdf
Guidelines for the Use of Prophylactic Anti-D Immunoglobulin (2006). British Committee for
Standards in Haematology (a revised version is in preparation).
http://www.bcshguidelines.com/documents/Anti-D_bcsh_07062006.pdf
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (2011). The Use of Anti-D
Immunoglobulin for Rhesus D Prophylaxis (Green Top Guideline No. 22).
http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/GTG22AntiDJuly2013.pdf
Guidelines for the Estimation of Fetomaternal Haemorrhage (2009). British Committee for
Standards in Haematology. http://www.bcshguidelines.com
Chapter 10
National Comparative Audit of Blood Transfusion (2010). National Comparative Audit of
Red Cells in Neonates and Children 2010.
http://hospital.blood.co.uk/library/pdf/NCA_red_cells_neonates_children.pdf
Peterson JA, McFarland JG, Curtis BR, Aster RH (2013). Neonatal alloimmune
thrombocytopenia: pathogenesis, diagnosis and management. British Journal of
Haematology 161: 314. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23384054
Gibson BES et al. (2004). Transfusion Guidelines for Neonates and Older Children. British
Committee for Standards in Haematology (http://www.bcshguidelines.com); British Journal
of Haematology 124: 433453 (a revised version is in preparation).
145
Appendices
Whyte R, Kirpalani H (2011). Low versus high haemoglobin concentration threshold for
blood transfusion for preventing morbidity and mortality in very low birth weight infants.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews CD000512.
Venkatesh V, Khan R, Curley A, New H, Stanworth S (2012). How we decide when a
neonate needs a transfusion (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23094805); British
Journal of Haematology 2013, 160: 421433.
Milkins C, Berryman J, Cantwell C, Elliott C, Haggas R, Jones J, Rowley M, Williams M,
Win N (2012). Guidelines for Pre-Transfusion Compatibility Procedures in Blood Transfusion
Laboratories. British Committee for Standards in Haematology
(http://www.bcshguidelines.com); Transfusion Medicine 2013, 23: 335.
Lacroix, J et al. (2007). Transfusion strategies for patients in pediatric intensive care units.
New England Journal of Medicine 356: 16091619.
Chapter 11
Szczepiorkowski ZM, Winters JL, Bandarenko N et al. (2010). Guidelines on the use of
therapeutic apheresis in clinical practice evidence-based approach from the Apheresis
Applications Committee of the American Society for Apheresis. Journal of Clinical
Apheresis 25(3): 83177. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20568098
Guidelines on the Diagnosis and Management of Thrombocytopenic Purpura and other
Thrombotic Microangiopathies (2012). British Committee for Standards in Haematology.
http://www.bcshguidelines.com
Chapter 12
Information leaflets for patients and parents (NHSBT).
http://hospital.blood.co.uk/library/patient_information_leaflets/leaflets/
Information leaflets for patients and parents (SNBTS).
http://www.scotblood.co.uk/media/11442/receiving_a_transfusion_v12.pdf
Jehovahs Witnesses Hospital Information Services. [email protected]
London Regional Transfusion Committee. Care Pathways for the Management of Adult
Patients Refusing Blood (including Jehovahs Witnesses Patients).
http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/docs/pdfs/rtc-lo_2012_05_jw_policy.pdf
Pre-op assessment for Jehovahs witnesses (in Better Blood Transfusion Toolkit). http://
www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/index.aspx?Publication=BBT&Section=22&pageid=1352
Royal College of Surgeons of England (2002). Code of Practice for the Surgical
Management of Jehovahs Witnesses.
http://www.rcseng.ac.uk/publications/docs/jehovahs_witness.html
Developing a Blood Conservation Care Plan for Jehovahs Witness Patients with Malignant
Disease (2012). http://www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk/docs/pdfs/bbt-JW-Care-PlanMalignant-Disease-2012.pdf
146
Appendix 2: Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to the following colleagues who kindly reviewed and commented on draft
sections and chapters of the handbook:
Barts and The Royal London Hospitals and NHSBT
Su Brailsford
Therese Callaghan
Richard Carter
Chris Elliott
Rebecca Gerrard
Andrea Harris
NHSBT, Birmingham
Patricia Hewitt
NHSBT, Colindale
Catherine Howell
Marina Karakantza
David Keeling
Phil Learoyd
Brian McLelland
SNBTS, Edinburgh
Sheila MacLennan
NHSBT, Leeds
Edwin Massey
NHSBT, Bristol
Mike Murphy
Sue Murtaugh
Helen New
Kate Pendry
Liz Pirie
Simon Stanworth
Hazel Tinegate
Paul Wade
Jonathan Wallis
Mark Williams
NHSBT, Leeds
Appendices
Shubha Allard
147
14 Abbreviations
andGlossary
149
150
Abbreviations
AABB
ACD
ACE
angiotensin-converting enzyme
ACS
AIDS
ANH
APTT
ASFA
ATD
ATLL
ATR
AUGIB
BCSH
BP
blood pressure
BSE
BSQR
CJD
CreutzfeldtJakob disease
CKD
CMV
cytomegalovirus
CPB
cardiopulmonary bypass
CPD
CPOE
DAT
DHTR
DIC
DNA
deoxyribonucleic acid
Epo
erythropoietin
ESA
FFP
FMH
feto-maternal haemorrhage
FNHTR
G-CSF
151
GvHD
graft-versus-host disease
HAM
HAS
Hb
haemoglobin
HBsAg
HBV
hepatitis B virus
HCV
hepatitis C virus
HDFN
HHTR
HIT
heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
HIV
HLA
HNA
HPA
HPV
human parvovirus
HRQoL
HSC
HTLV
IAT
ICH
intracranial haemorrhage
ICS
Ig
immunoglobulin
IM
intramuscular
INR
ITP
IUT
IV
intravenous
JPAC
LDH
lactate dehydrogenase
LMWH
MB
methylene blue
MCV
MHRA
MSBOS
152
MSM
NAIT
NATA
NHSBT
NICE
NICU
NPSA
NSAIDs
PAD
PAS
PBM
PCA
patient-controlled analgesia
PCC
PCS
PI
pathogen inactivation
PICC
PICU
POCT
PT
prothrombin time
PTP
post-transfusion purpura
RAADP
RhD
RNA
ribonucleic acid
ROTEM
thromboelastometry
RR
respiratory rate
SABRE
SaBTO
SAE
SAG-M
SAR
SCD
SD
solvent detergent
SHOT
SNBTS
Abbreviations
153
SPC
TACO
TA-GvHD
TBI
TCD
transcranial Doppler
TEG
thromboelastography
THPO
thrombopoietin
TPE
TRALI
TRICC
TRIPICU
TT
thrombin time
TTI
transfusion-transmitted infection
TTP
UFH
unfractionated heparin
UKBTS
UKCSAG
UKRC
UK Resuscitation Council
vCJD
vWF
WHO
WNV
154
additive solution
allogeneic donation
anti-D immunoglobulin
apheresis
blood component
blood establishment
blood product
buffy coat
colloid solutions
cryoprecipitate
155
Glossary
crystalloid solutions
cytomegalovirus (CMV)
electronic issue
epoetin
erythropoietin
granulocytes
haemovigilance
Kleihauer test
156
leucodepleted
massive transfusion
pathogen reduction
plasma
plasma derivative
157
Glossary
red cells
saline
thrombocytopenia
traceability
tranexamic acid
158
viral inactivation
whole blood
159
Glossary
Index
161
Index
symptomatic75
anaphylactic reactions 4950
anti-A/anti-B
and acute haemolytic reactions 45
high-titre 8, 17
IgM antibodies 7
anti-c alloantibodies 110
anti-D antibodies 9, 110
anti-D immunoglobulin 112, 113
anti-K alloantibodies 97, 110
anti-T antibodies, severe haemolytic
reactions124
antibodies
incomplete8
maternal, in neonatal plasma 122
screening 10, 16
warm/cold7
Antibody Card 54
anticoagulants 77, 78
antifibrinolytic agents 6667, 76, 80, 86
antiglobulin test (Coombs test) 8
antiplatelet agents 76, 77, 7879, 80
apheresis
acceptability to Jehovahs Witnesses 136
frequency of donation 16
aprotinin67
aspirin7879
autologous blood transfusion 6366
automated analysis/testing systems 10, 11
bacterial contamination 49, 5859
barcodes, use in blood-tracking systems 35
Better Blood Transfusion initiatives 73
bilirubin encephalopathy 120
biological glues 67
bleeding disorders, congenital 76
bleeding problems, in surgical patients 76
blood
alternatives91
see also transfusion, alternatives and adjuncts
compatibility labels 18
emergency group O stock 35
frequent sampling, in neonates 122
for planned procedures 11
receiving in the clinical area 35
blood administration set 37
blood components
administration 36, 40
allergic or anaphylactic reactions 4950
bacterial contamination 49, 58
collection and delivery 35
derivatives acceptable to Jehovahs
Witnesses136
dose for infants and children 125
expensive and limited 73
granulocytes2425
163
Index
abciximab79
ABO haemolytic disease 110
ABO incompatibility
and organ transplantation 94
transfusion reactions 89, 45, 100101
ABO system
changed after allogeneic HSC transplant
100101
clinical importance 7
discovery7
ethnic variance 8
poorly expressed in early life 122
testing 78, 10
activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) 85,
123, 125
ratio78
acute normovolaemic haemodilution (ANH) 66
acute transfusion reactions (ATRs)
investigation48
recognition and management 4445, 4647
risk43
acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (AUGIB)
8687
ADAMTS13131
Advance Decision Document 136, 137
adverse events
in children 118
reporting 4344, 64, 87
Advisory Committee on the Safety of Blood,
Tissues and Organs (SaBTO) 33, 57
AIDS57
see also HIV
alemtuzumab (anti-CD52) 94
allergic reactions 4950, 53, 86
alloantibodies 7, 10, 97, 110
allogeneic blood transfusion, refusal 110
alteplase79
American Association of Blood Banks (AABB)
guidelines75
American Society for Apheresis, guidelines 129,
130
-aminocaproic acid (EACA) 66
amniocentesis111
anaemia
in cancer patients 93
of chronic disease (ACD) 92
in critical care patients 80
fetal118
iron deficiency 74, 92, 108
macrocytic109
megaloblastic92
in pregnancy 107, 108109
of prematurity 121
preoperative7475
and renal disease 93
screening test for donors 16
164
Index
darbopoietin alfa 68
defibrination, and obstetric haemorrhage 109
dental extractions, bleeding problems 76
desferrioxamine95
desmopressin (DDAVP) 68
DiGeorge syndrome 121
direct antiglobulin test (DAT) 8, 113, 122
disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
in acute haemolytic reactions 8, 45
in critical care patients 80, 82
in haemato-oncology patients 126
in neonates 123, 124
and obstetric haemorrhage 109
platelet refractoriness 100
use of FFP 22, 82
DNA testing/genotyping, future development 17
documentation
manual35
requirements32
donations
bacterial contamination 58
viral infections 5556
donors
age limits 15
apheresis16
eligibility, exclusion and deferral criteria 16, 17
genetic haemochromatosis 16
recruitment15
double volume exchange, neonatal 120
elderly patients
in critical care 81
high-risk surgery 80
with low-risk myelodysplasia 103
non-surgical transfusions 91
risk of TACO 40, 52, 91, 92
electronic issue, guidelines 11
electronic transfusion management systems 32
see also automated; computerised
emergency treatment 32, 33
eptifibatide79
erythema infectiosum (slapped cheek
syndrome)58
165
Index
haematinic deficiencies 92
haemato-oncology
paediatric patients 125126
use of transfusion 98103
haemodialysis, acceptability to Jehovahs
Witnesses136
haemoglobin
abnormal95
molecular structure 94
safe concentration 75
haemoglobinopathies9498
haemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn
(HDFN)
declining incidence 120
due to anti-D 9, 111
due to anti-K 10
intrauterine transfusion of red cells 118119
occurrence110
prevention110113
risk109
treatment120
haemolytic reactions
acute 45, 4849
after ABO-incompatible solid organ
transplantation94
caused by ABO-incompatible plasma 8
on stem cell infusion 100
haemopoietic stem cells (HSC)
rescue98
transplantation 98, 100101
haemorrhage
antepartum111
postpartum 65, 66, 67, 109, 110
see also major haemorrhage; obstetric
haemorrhage
haemorrhagic disease of the newborn, due to
vitamin K deficiency 123, 124
haemovigilance4344
SHOT scheme 4344
HBsAg, screening for 16
HCV see hepatitis
heparins78
hepatitis A/B/C/E 16, 5557
HIV 16, 5556, 57
Hospital Liaison Committee for Jehovahs
Witnesses136
hospital transfusion laboratory, compatibility
procedures1011
HPV see parvovirus
HTLV 16, 56, 57
HTLV I related myelopathy (HAM) 57
human albumin solution (HAS) 2526
human error 11, 29, 34, 45
human leucocyte antigen (HLA) antigens,
alloimmunisation 9394, 100
human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-selected
platelets22
human platelet antigen (HPA), antibodies to 119
human platelet antigen (HPA)-selected
platelets22
166
Index
167
Index
patients
consent33
refusal of transfusions 65, 135137
peptic ulcer disease 86
pharmacological measures
in major haemorrhage 86
to reduce transfusion 6669
phenotyping, extended 95
phlebotomy, blood losses 80
phototherapy, intensive 120
placenta praevia 11, 109
placental abruption 109
planned procedures, samples for group and
screen11
plasma
compatibility issues 8, 22
imported 17, 22, 23, 25, 103, 118, 124
screening for alloantibodies 10
volume, in pregnancy 107
plasma components 2224
in critical care 82
plasma derivatives
licensed medical products 17, 2526
manufactured from imported plasma 17, 22,
23, 25, 103, 118, 124
production 18, 19
plasma fractionation centres 17
platelet additive solution (PAS) 21
platelet administration sets 37
platelet antigens (HPA-1a, HPA-5b, HPA3a) 119,
120
platelet components 2022
bacterial contamination 58
platelet count
low76
in pregnancy 107
platelet function analysis/mapping 78
platelet surface receptor inhibitors 79
platelet transfusion, in major haemorrhage 86
platelet transfusion
in children with haematological
malignancies125126
in critical care 80, 82
indications20
intrauterine119120
neonatal 118, 123
in obstetric haemorrhage 109
prophylactic 9899, 122
refractoriness99100
thresholds76
plateletpheresis, therapeutic 132
platelets
in additive solution 21
administration40
adult therapeutic dose (ATD) 20
apheresis 21, 125
compatibility 9, 20, 100, 125
from pooled buffy coats 21
HPA1a/5b negative 120
irradiated21
168
Index
SABRE IT system 44
saline, adenine, glucose and mannitol (SAG-M)
additive solution 8, 20, 121, 124
samples, labelling 34, 45
sampling
frequent 80, 122
pre-transfusion 10, 11, 30, 43, 45
satellite refrigerators, computer-controlled 11,
31, 35, 45
Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service 15
sepsis 80, 81, 98
Serious Hazards of Transfusion (SHOT)
169
Index
transfusion continued
in critically ill patients 8082
delayed reactions 5355
documentation requirements 32
errors29
fetal118
in haemato-oncology 98103
inappropriate 73, 74, 9192, 109
of infants and children 125126
infectious hazards 5560
in management of major haemorrhage 8287
monitoring 1, 31, 32, 35, 3637, 44, 4647, 48
neonatal 118, 120124
never events 8
non-infectious hazards 4455
non-surgical indications 91
and organ transplantation 9394
in paediatric practice 117126
patient anxiety 135
patient consent 33
patient information 135
in pregnancy 109
refusal 135, 136137
requests34
safety15
standardised indication codes 34
support for myelosuppressive treatment 98
in surgery 7476
technical aspects 3740
ten commandments 3
urgent, in emergency situations 32, 33
transfusion policies/triggers
in critical care 80
in cytotoxic therapy 98
liberal vs restrictive 75, 80, 87
in paediatric practice 120, 122, 125
in surgical patients 75, 80
transfusion recipients, not eligible as blood
donors17
Transfusion Requirements In Critical Care (TRICC)
study80
transfusion-associated circulatory overload
(TACO) 40, 44, 51, 52, 86, 91, 122
transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease
(TA-GvHD)
diagnosis54
prevention102103
risk factors 54
use of irradiated components 20, 21, 22, 24,
54, 119
170
transfusion-dependent patients
children125
elderly103
with thalassaemia 95, 125
transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) 21,
22, 44, 5152, 86
transfusion-transmitted infections (TTIs) 5559
transplant recipients, not eligible as blood
donors17
traumatic haemorrhage, tranexamic acid
doses67
Treponema pallidum see syphilis
TRIGGER trial 87
Trypanosoma cruzi 16, 59
UK Blood Services, common standards 15
UK Cell Salvage Action Group (UKCSAG) 64
UK Resuscitation Council (UKRC) guidelines 50
universal donors 8
vaginal bleeding, in pregnancy 111, 112
variant CreutzfeldtJakob disease (vCJD) 17,
5960, 103
viral infections 5558, 64
vitamin B12 deficiency 92
vitamin K prophylaxis, at birth 123
von Willebrand factor cleaving protein
(ADAMTS13)131
von Willebrand factor (vWF) 68
warfarin anticoagulation
perioperative management 76
reversal 22, 26, 40, 86, 125
washed red cells, specifications 20
Welsh Blood Service 15
West Nile virus (WNV) 16, 58
WOMAN trial 110
women of childbearing potential see pregnancy
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