| Literature DB >> 32355289 |
Nosha Farhadfar1, Hemant S Murthy2, Brent R Logan3,4, Jennifer A Sees5, Mouhab Ayas6, Minoo Battiwalla7, Amer M Beitinjaneh8, Saurabh Chhabra9, Miguel Angel Diaz10, Katie Engles11, Haydar Frangoul12, Siddhartha Ganguly13, Usama Gergis14, Nayesh R Kamani15, Rammurti T Kamble16, Kimberly A Kasow17, Hillard M Lazarus18, Jane L Liesveld19, Maxim Norkin1, Paul V O' Donnell20, Richard F Olsson21,22, Susan Rossmann23, Bipin N Savani24, Raquel Schears25, Sachiko Seo26, Melhem M Solh27, Thomas Spitzer28, Michele Sugrue29, Jean A Yared30, Michael Linenberger31, Joseph Schwartz32, Michael A Pulsipher33, Nirali N Shah34, Galen E Switzer35, Dennis L Confer5,36, Bronwen E Shaw37, John R Wingard1.
Abstract
Pre-harvest autologous blood collection from bone marrow (BM) donors is performed to meet potential post-operative transfusion needs. This study examines the impact of autologous blood transfusion on BM donor's health and safety. The study included first-time unrelated BM donors from the United States whose BM harvest was facilitated by the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) centers between 2006 and 2017. Examination of 7024 BM donors revealed that 60% received at least one unit of autologous blood. The donors who received autologous blood were older, had lower hemoglobin pre-harvest, underwent longer duration of anesthesia, and higher volume BM harvest. Only donors who underwent high-volume BM harvest, defined as a BM harvest volume >27% of donor's blood volume, benefited from autologous transfusion. After a high-volume BM harvest, autologous blood transfusion was shown to decrease grade 2 to 4 collection-associated toxicities within 48 h of BM donation (p = 0.010) and shorten the time to donor-reported "complete" recovery from donation-associated symptoms (p < 0.001). Therefore, autologous transfusion could be avoided as support of marrow donation in the majority of unrelated BM donors and should be limited to cases where the planned BM harvest volume is expected to exceed 27% of donor's blood volume.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32355289 PMCID: PMC7606543 DOI: 10.1038/s41409-020-0911-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483