Title: Transfusion Medicine
1Transfusion Medicine
- Cheryl Pollock
- 13 November 03
2Objectives
- An understanding of
- Available blood products
- Appropriate selection of blood products according
to the clinical setting - Potential complications of the transfusion
3Outline
- Blood banking
- Emergency transfusions
- Transfusion reactions and risks
- Component therapy
4Blood Bank Basics
- Type screen
- Blood group (ABO) identification
- Rh typing
- Antibody screening
- Cross-matching
5ABO Identification
- gt400 RBC antigens have been identified
- Major ones are ABO type, and Rh type
- Anti-ABO Abs are IgM that bind complement and
cause agglutination and destruction of red cells
gt acute intravascular hemolysis - Presence of AB antigens are determined by
testing with anti-A and anti-B Abs
6ABO Compatibility
Phenotype RBC Ag Serum Ab Can receive
A A anti-B A, O
B B anti-A B, O
AB A and B None A, B, O
O None anti-A, anti-B O
7Rh Typing
- Major Rh system Ag is the D Ag
- Rh status determined by testing with anti-D
antibodies - Rh-neg females of child-bearing age always get Rh
neg blood products - Rh-neg males and elderly females can get Rh-pos
blood if emergent transfusion required
8Antibody Screening
- To determine presence of
- Complete (agglutinating) antibodies
- Agglutinate RBCs in saline
- Usually IgM
- Responsible for HTR
- Incomplete (non-agglutinating) antibodies
- special techniques to visualize agglutination
- Usually IgG
- Not responsible for HTR
9Antibody Screening
- All antibody screens are negative
- Patient has no unexpected anti-bodies
- Donor blood released after an abbreviated or
electronic cross-match - Any antibody screens are positive
- Patient has one/more unexpected antibodies which
need identification - Donors must be antigen-negative
- Full cross-match required
10Antibody ScreeningCoombs Test
- Direct Coombs
- To detect Abs or complement on surface Ags of
RBCs - Agglutination IgG antibodies in the patients
serum have bound to recipient RBCs - Indications
- Hemolytic disease of newborn
- Hemolytic anemia
- Hemolytic transfusion reaction
11Antibody ScreeningCoombs Test
- Indirect Coombs
- Indirect antiglobulin test
- Detect Abs in serum that can recognize Ags on
RBC. - i.e. detect Abs capable of hemolysing RBCs
- By mixing serum with donor RBC and then
anti-antibody Abs RBC agglutination test - Indications
- Cross-matching -bl gr Abs in pregnant pts
- Atypical bl gr
12Pre-transfusion Testing
- Donor
- ABO and Rh status confirmed
- Recipient
- Abo and Rh determined
- Antibody screening
- For 18 clinically-relevant antigens
- Indirect Coombs
- If positive specific identification, transfusion
ideally delayed
13Cross-Matching
- Test of donor/recipient RBC compatibility
- Immediate spin cross-match
- Recipient serum donor RBCs, spin tube, read
immediately - Detects ABO incompatibility only
- Complete cross-match
- If antibody screen
- Donor units w/out specific Ag are each tested
with indirect Coombs
14Cross-Matching
- Electronic cross-match
- Donor blood issued based on blood bank info
- Recipients ABO and Rh type has been done twice
and filed in computer - No clinically significant antibodies found in
current or past blood samples - Contraindications
- Significant antibodies present (current or past)
15Emergency Transfusions
- PRBCs are the only blood product that can be used
for emergency transfusion - Plasma products contain too many Abs
- Patient stability and the time available before
intervention is needed will determine what is
chosen - Prior to transfusion, draw blood for typing and
cross-matching
16Indications for ED Transfusion
- Consider
- Comorbidity -Cardiac status
- Rate of bleeding
- Acute/subacute bleed with impaired oxygen
delivery to tissues - Hb lt60-70 g/L
- Symptomatic chronic anemia with Hb lt60-70 g/L
- Pre-op
17Pediatric Pearls
- Hemodynamic parameters can be deceiving
- Normotensive until 30 blood volume lost acutely
- In pediatric trauma, emergency transfusion of gt20
ml/kg is associated with increased mortality
18Emergency transfusions
- Case 1
- 56 y.o. male, motorcycle vs. car, with open femur
fracture, unstable pelvis - HR 130, bp 80/50, intubated at scene for GCS6.
- Blood? How soon?
19Emergency Transfusions
- Universal Donor Group O
- Uncross-matched type O
- Indications
- Massive, uncontrolled hemorrhage from any cause
- e.g. trauma, massive GI bleed, ruptured AAA
- Women of child-bearing age need group O-
20Emergency Transfusions Other Options
- Type-Specific
- 5-10 min
- ABO grouping, Rh typing
- pt can be initially stabilized with crystalloid
- Incomplete cross-match
- 30 min
- ABO group, Rh type, spin cross-match
- Fully cross-match
- 45-60 min
- Reserved for specific patient for 48h
21Administration
- PRBCs
- 1 unit 250ml, Hct 60-70
- 1 unit 10 g/L increase in Hb
- Peds 1ml/kg PRBCs 1 increase in hematocrit
- Bedside check
- Recipient unit i.d., compatibility, expiration
- Large-bore needles to prevent hemolysis
- Blood warmers if massive transfusion
- Blood only mixed with NS no meds in same IV line
22Complications
- Transfusion reaction
- Immediate
- Delayed
- Infectious disease transmission
- Transfusion-associated coagulopathies
23Transfusion Reactions
- Immediate
- Hemolytic
- Intravascular
- Non-hemolytic
- Febrile
- Allergic
- Acute lung injury
- Hypervolemia
- Delayed
- Hemolytic (extravascular)
- Infectious
- Graft v. Host disease
- Electrolyte imbalance
24Transfusion Reactions
- Case 2
- 70 y.o. male transfused for UGI bleed
- Transfusion of first unit PRBCs
- Acutely dyspneic, chest and low back pain, with
burning at IV site. - O/E T 39C HR 120 BP 100/60
25Acute Hemolytic Transfusion Reaction
(Intravascular)
- Medical emergency due to ABO incompatibility
(usually clerical error) - Incompatible donor cells are destroyed by
recipient antibodies - Intravascular cell lysisgt hemoglobinemia and
hemoglobinuria - Incidence 1/20 000 transfusions
- Fatal 1/100 000 transfusions
26Acute Hemolytic Transfusion Reaction
- Presentation
- chills, headache, N/V, burning at infusion site,
- Chest tightness, dyspnea, low back pain
- O/E fever, tachycardia, hypotension
- Complications
- Cardiogenic shock, respiratory failure
- ATN
- DIC
27Acute Hemolytic ReactionTreatment Principles
- Prevention
- Slow infusion for 15 min, Q5min VS
- STOP THE TRANSFUSION
- Replace IV tubing
- ABCs
- Hemodynamic stability crystalloid/- pressors
- Adequate renal blood flow
- Low-dose dopamine infusion
- Urine output gt100ml/h (fluid furosemide)
28Acute Hemolytic Reaction
- Evaluation
- Retype and cross-match
- Direct indirect Coombs
- CBC, creatinine, PT/PTT
- Haptoglobin, indirect BR, LDH, plasma free Hb
- Urine for Hb
29Immediate Transfusion Reactions
- Non-hemolytic
- Febrile
- Allergic
- Acute lung injury
- hypervolemia
30Transfusion Reactions
- Case 3
- 58 y.o. female post-elective TAH.
- During transfusion of 1st unit PRBCs, c/o
malaise, chills, feels warm. - O/E T 39C HR 90 BP 120/80
31Immediate Transfusion Reactions
- Febrile non-hemolytic
- Impossible to clinically distinguish from acute
hemolytic reaction - Caused by Ag-Ab reaction involving
plasma/components passively transfused - Usually mild
- Worse if poor CV status, critically ill
- Multi-transfused, multiparous patients
32Febrile Non-hemolytic Reaction
- Presentation
- Fever, chills
- Mgmt
- Stop transfusion
- Initial Rx as per acute hemolytic reaction
- Acetaminophen, meperidine
- Evaluation
- Hemolytic W/U /- infectious W/U
33Allergic Transfusion Reaction
- Anaphylaxis
- Rare (1/20 000 transfusions)
- Suggests IgA deficiency
- Presentation
- Dyspnea, bronchospasm, shock
- Mgmt
- Epi, steroid, anti-histamine, pressors
- Do not restart transfusion
- Hemolytic W/U
34Allergic Transfusion Reaction
- Minor
- Presentation
- Urticaria, pruritis, erythema
- Mgmt
- Stop transfusion
- Anti-histamine
- If symptoms resolve, can restart transfusion
- No further W/U
35Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury
- Anti-WBC donor Abs recipient WBC -gt complement
activation in lung -gt non-cardiogenic pulmonary
edema - Clinical diagnosis
- Empiric treatment with steroids and respiratory
support - Usually resolves within 48-96h
36Delayed Transfusion Reactions
- Extravascular hemolytic transfusion reaction
- Days to weeks
- Non-ABO Abs bind to RBCs -gt deformation -gt
splenic sequestration -gt extravascular hemolysis - Presentation
- Mild reaction
- Fever, jaundice hemoglobinuria rare
- No specific treatment
37Delayed Transfusion Reactions
- All blood tested for
- HIV Ag -HTLV I,II -HBsAg
-syphilis - Ab to HIVI, II -HCV -HCAg
- Infectious
- Hep A 1 1 000 000
- Hep B 1 30 000- 1 250 000
- Hep C 1 30 000 1 150 000
- HIV 1 200 000 1 2 000 000
- Data from Goodnough et al. NEJM 340440, 1999
38Delayed Transfusion Reactions
- Case 4
- 44 y.o. male with Non-Hodgkins lymphoma 1/52
post-chemo - c/o fatigue, presyncope, SOBOE
- Hb 68
- Risks of transfusion.
39Graft v. Host Disease
- Rarely encountered in ED
- Keep in mind if considering transfusion in anemic
leukemic/lymphoma pts - Viable lymphocytes transfused with PRBCs
- Multiplying, histoincompatible lymphocytes attack
recipient-gtmore BM suppression
40Graft v. Host Disease
- Sx
- Fever, N/V, rash, diarrhea, hepatomegaly
- Increased LFTs, pancytopenia
- No effective treatment
- Fatal
- Prevention
- Gamma irradiation of all cell components,
rendering donor lymphocytes incapable of
proliferating
41Delayed Transfusion Reactions
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Hypocalcemia
- Citrate preservative.
- Hyperkalemia
- K leakage across membrane
- Problem in renal failure, neonates
42Dilutional Coagulopathy
- Massive transfusion
- Dilution of platelets coagulation factors
- Check platelets coags after 5-10u PRBC
- Platelet transfusion only if thrombocytopeniamicr
ovascular bleeding - FFP only if PT/PTT gt1.5x norm
43Component Therapy
- Platelets
- FFP
- Cryoprecipitate
44Platelet Transfusion
- Indications
- count lt 20 x 109/L lt 50 x 109/L if bleeding or
planned invasive procedure - Therapy
- Should be ABO-specific
- Usually 6u at a time increase of 50-60 x109/L
- BUTconsider cause of thrombocytopenia
- DIC, splenomegaly, antibodies may be refractory
to platelet transfusion
45Fresh Frozen Plasma
- All coagulation factors fibrinogen
- Indications
- Emergent reversal of warfarin therapy
- Correction of coagulation deficiencies
- Therapy
- Must be ABO compatible
- 1u 250ml
- Dose 10-15 ml/kg
46Cryoprecipitate
- Contains
- Factor VIIIC, vonWillebrand Factor, fibrinogen
- Indications
- Bleeding associated with
- Hypo-/dysfibrinogenemia (e.g. DIC)
- vonWillebrands disease if FVIII not available
- Hemophilia A if FVIII not available
- Therapy
- Should be ABO compatible (no cross-match)
- Usual dose 10u
47References
- Marx Rosens Emergency Medicine concepts and
Clinical Practice, 5th ed. - Tintinalli. Emergency Medicine A Comprehensive
Study Guide, 5th ed. - Ross, AK. Pediatric trauma. Anesthesia
management. Anesthesiol Clin North Amer. 01 June
2001 19(2) 309-37
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