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1.
Transfus Med ; 32(3): 221-228, 2022 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34845765

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of extended matching of red blood cells (RBC) in practice. BACKGROUND: At present, alloimmunisation preventing matching strategies are only applied for specific transfusion recipient groups and include a limited number of RBC antigens. The general assumption is that providing fully matched RBC units to all transfusion recipients is not feasible. In this article we refute this assumption and compute the proportion of alloimmunisation that can be prevented, when all donors and transfusion recipients are typed for A, B, D plus twelve minor blood group antigens (C, c, E, e, K, Fya , Fyb , Jka , Jkb , M, S and s). METHODS: We developed a mathematical model that determines the optimal sequence for antigen matching. The model allows for various matching strategies, issuing policies and inventory sizes. RESULTS: For a dynamic inventory composition (accounting for randomness in the phenotypes supplied and requested) and an antigen identical issuing policy 97% and 94% of alloimmunisation events can be prevented, when respectively one and two RBC units per recipient are requested from an inventory of 1000 units. Although this proportion decreases with smaller inventory sizes, even for an inventory of 60 units almost 50% of all alloimmunisation events can be prevented. CONCLUSION: In case antigen of both donors and recipients are comprehensively typed, extended preventive matching is feasible for all transfusion recipients in practice and will significantly reduce transfusion-induced alloimmunisation and (alloantibody-induced) haemolytic transfusion reactions.


Asunto(s)
Anemia Hemolítica Autoinmune , Reacción a la Transfusión , Tipificación y Pruebas Cruzadas Sanguíneas , Transfusión Sanguínea , Eritrocitos , Humanos , Isoanticuerpos
2.
Front Med (Lausanne) ; 5: 199, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30090809

RESUMEN

Alloimmunization is currently the most frequent adverse blood transfusion event. Whilst completely matched donor blood would nullify the alloimmunization risk, this is practically infeasible. Current matching strategies therefore aim at matching a limited number of blood groups only, and have evolved over time by systematically including matching strategies for those blood groups for which (serious) alloimmunization complications most frequently occurred. An optimal matching strategy for controlling the risk of alloimmunization however, would balance alloimmunization complications and costs within the entire blood supply chain, whilst fulfilling all practical requirements and limitations. In this article the outline of an integrated blood management model is described and various potential challenges and prospects foreseen with the development of such a model are discussed.

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