Title: BLOOD TRANSFUSION SUPPORT IN STEM CELL TRANSPLANT
1BLOOD TRANSFUSION SUPPORT IN STEM CELL TRANSPLANT
- Salwa Hindawi
- Director of Blood Transfusion Services
- KAUH, Jeddah
- Saudi Arabia
2Introduction
- Bone Marrow Transplant can be either
- Allogeneic
- Autologous
- PBSCT
- Cord Blood
3Diseases Treatable by BMT
- Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma Hodgkins Disease
Multiple Myeloma Acute Leukemias Chronic
Leukemias Myelodysplasia Testicular Cancer
Aplastic Anemia
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5Role of transfusion services
Basic transplant issues that impact blood bank
policies. Recognize common serologic problems
encountered in transplant recipients Appropriate
blood products when transfusion is needed.
6Basic transplant issues
- Recipient-Donor ABO compatibility.
- ABO and Rh compatibility are not required for
the successful outcome of BMT
7BASIC TRANSPLANT ISSUES
- Special Blood Requirement
- Irradiated
- CMV Negative
- Leukocyte-Reduced
- Saline-washed or volume reduced
8Pre-Transplant Considerations
- Is this a major or minor ABO incompatibility?
- How high the patients antibody titers against
the donors ABO group? - How high the donors antibody titers against the
patients ABO group?
- Will the patient require special conditioning?
Will the HPC collection require processing?
9RECIPIENT-DONOR ABO COMPATIBILITY
Compatible transplant Immunohemtologic
complications Major incompatibility Minor
incompatibility Major minor incompatibility
10Recipient- Donor ABO Compatibility
- ABO Major Mismatch Recipient is O-Donor is A
- -Acute hemolysis at infusion.
- -Delayed hemolysis from persistent patient
antibodies. - -Delayed onset of hematopoiesis.
- ABO Minor Mismatch Recipient is A- Donor is O
- -Acute hemolysis at infusion.
- -Delayed hemolysis from donor antibodies.
- ABO Major-Minor Mismatch Recipient is A-Donor is
B
11ABO COMPATIBILITY
DONOR
Blood Group O A B AB
O Compatible Major Major Major
A Minor Compatible Major and minor Major
B Minor Major and minor Compatible Major
AB Minor Minor Minor Compatible
RECIPIENT
12TRANSFUSIONS FOLLOWING BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION
- beginning with preparative regimen
- ABO compatibility is not required between bone
marrow donor and recipient. - Compatible transplant
- no special requirements
- Minor incompatibility
- recipient type plasma and platelet until
recipient cells have disappeared
13TRANSFUSIONS FOLLOWING BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION
- Major incompatibility
- recipient type red cells until recipient
isoagglutinins have disappeared -
- Major and minor incompatibilities
- group AB plasma, group AB or washed platelets
until recipient cells gone group O red cells
until recipient isoagglutinins have disapeared.
14Blood Selection when recipient/donor are not ABO
identical
Patient ABO Donor ABO RBC FFP 1st Choice plt 2nd Choice plt
O A B AB O O O A,AB B,AB AB B,O A,O A,B,O
A O B AB O O A,O A,AB AB AB B,O B,A,O A,B,O
B O A AB O O B,O B,AB AB AB A,O A,B,O B,A,O
AB O A B O A,O B,O AB AB AB A,B,O A,B,O A,B,O
15NON-ABO MISMATCHES
- major Rh-incomp.,patient anti-D antibodies
against engrafted donor Rh RBCs. - Mismatches involving Rh system may cause
hemolysis, do not affect survival. - Kidd,M,N and S.
16Complications Related to Blood Transfusion
- Haemolysis
- Alloimmunization to red cell antigens
- Infection (CMV)
- Graft-Verses Host Disease (GVHD)
17Passenger B lymphocyte syndrome
- Delayed hemolysis 7-14 days post transplant
- Mediated by donor lymphocytes carried in the HSC
component - Immune hemolysis of the recipients red cells as
results of anti A and/or anti B production - PBSC at greater risk than marrow
- Abrupt onset may be severe with signs of IV
hemolysis
18Passenger B lymphocyte syndrome
- Worsen with transfusion ,due to hemolysis of
transfused group O RBCs . - Methotrexate as anti-proliferative agent use to
suppress the proliferation of donor lymphocytes
in HSC inoculum.
19PROPHYLAXIS
- Transfusion of Group O red cells
- Occasional red cell exchange transfusion is
indicated to replace the recipients incompatible
red cells with Group O. - Recipient ABO plts type
20Marrow Processing
- Red cell depletion and/or plasma depletion ONLY
performed on BM collection. - Red cell depletion Recipient has Ab against
Donor red cells. - To avoid hemolysis of donor red blood cells in
HPC collection. - Plasma depletion Donor has AbS against Recipient
red cell . - To avoid hemolysis of red blood cells in
recipients circulation.
21Leucodepletion of Blood Components
Alloimmunization Prevention of Febrile Non
Haemolytic Transfusion Reaction. Replacement of
CMV negative blood components.
22Irradiation of blood products
-
- All cellular components should be gamma
irradiated (25 Gy or 2500 cGy) this inactivates
the T lymphocytes in the donor unit and prevents
graft versus host disease in an immunocompromised
recipient. - Start at conditioning
- for 6month in Allogeneic BMT
- 3 month for Autologous BMT
23Indications for Gamma Irradiated Blood Components
- congenital immunodeficiency syndromes.
- intrauterine transfusions.
- All neonates who received intrauterine
transfusion. - transfusions from all blood relatives.
- bone marrow transplant recipients.
24Cord Blood
- The multipotent-stem-cell-rich blood found in the
umbilical cord has proven useful in treating the
same types of diseases as those treated using
bone marrow stem cells and PBSCs. - Umbilical cord blood stem cell transplants are
less prone to rejection than either bone marrow
or peripheral blood stem cells. - Umbilical cord blood lacks well-developed immune
cells - the cells have not yet developed the features
that can be recognized and attacked by the
recipient's immune system
25Conclusions
- Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is rapidly
expanding as a practical and therapeutic
modalities. - the transfusion medicine professional must take
into account the series of immunohematological
changes and complications that may arise in such
patients. - We must apply techniques, methods, and approaches
not routinely used in the general blood-banking
environment. -
26Thanks