Revisiting the Universal Donor: Does Exposure to O Blood Products Affect Patient Outcomes?
NCT ID: NCT04859218
Last Updated: 2024-10-17
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
30 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-10-17
2025-12-31
Brief Summary
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The ability to undertake critical exploratory analyses in transfusion medicine is enabled by large research and administrative data sets that include all Hamilton hospitals. The initial finding of potential harm with ABO non-identical RBCs is hypothesis-generating and requires confirmation through external datasets and translational studies to support a biological mechanism. If confirmed, this hypothesis can then be tested in a clinical trial.
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Detailed Description
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Other retrospective studies have also shown ABO non-identical platelet transfusions to be associated with an increased risk of platelet refractoriness and that refractory patients had circulating immune complexes for several days. Post transfusion platelet count increments were also higher when ABO identical platelets were transfused. In a retrospective study of 153 patients undergoing primary coronary artery bypass graft or coronary valve replacement surgery, the transfusion of at least one ABO non-identical platelet pool was associated with an increased hospital stay, more days with fever, and more RBC transfusions. Other outcomes (mortality in hospital, length of stay in the intensive care unit, antibiotic days, and a total number of platelet transfusions) were not statistically different. A subgroup analysis (n=139) of patients who received at least two platelet pools showed a non-significant trend towards increased morbidity and mortality (8.6% vs. 1.9%; p=0.10) in recipients of ABO-matched platelets. A retrospective study by Lapierre et al. analyzed data from 186 consecutive children with neuroblastoma or brain tumors who were treated with high-dose chemotherapy followed by hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The primary endpoint was hepatic veno-occlusive disease. In their multivariate analysis, two factors significantly increased the risk of this outcome: transfusion of platelet concentrates containing ABO-incompatible plasma and use of melphalan in the conditioning regimen. They concluded that transfusion of platelet concentrates containing ABO-incompatible plasma increases the risk of hepatic veno-occlusive disease and hypothesized that passive antibody binding to A and/or B antigens expressed on the surface of hepatic endothelial cells could be involved in the pathophysiology.
It is important to emphasize that a publication bias probably exists in this literature with primarily positive studies being reported, and most of the studies are observational (lower quality evidence). Many of the platelet studies also included both minor incompatibilities (plasma in the platelet product has ABO antibodies that react with the recipient's RBCs) and major incompatibilities (recipient's plasma has ABO antibodies that react with ABO antigens on the transfused platelets); however, this literature combined with our preliminary exploratory analyses (Z. Sohl, personal communication, April 30th, 2020) raises the hypothesis that ABO non-identical transfusions (whether minor or major) could impact patient outcomes and should be further explored.
Possible biological mechanism: The concept of transfusion-related immune modulation (TRIM) was defined over 30 years ago. More recent evidence suggests that biological mechanisms leading to TRIM can be the heterogeneous involving donor, product, and/or patient factors that contribute to patient morbidities and mortality. A conceptual framework for two possible mechanisms that could lead to harm post-transfusion are a proinflammatory pathway and an immunosuppression pathway. For both pathways, inflammation is one of the prime targets that contribute to the adverse events seen in recipients. In this study, the investigators will use biomarkers of inflammation to determine if the differences are seen between patients who receive ABO identical RBC or platelet transfusions compared to those receiving ABO non-identical blood products.
The investigators hypothesize that passive anti-A and anti-B (from group O donors) can bind to recipients' endothelial cells or soluble antigen causing circulating immune complexes that can signal cytokine generation and release causing a "cytokine storm". The severity of the storm may be tempered or enhanced by the secretor status of the recipient and possibly the donor, the titre of the passive antibody transfused, and Group A or AB recipients' subgroup status (A1/A2). Antibody incompatibility could also lead to small amounts of hemolysis, which could trigger an inflammatory response. The biomarkers frequently used to detect inflammation include interleukin-6 (IL-6); tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α); interleukin-8 (IL-8) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β); CD40 Ligand and, C-reactive protein (CRP). Markers of hemolysis in patients post-transfusion include bilirubin, haptoglobin, and lactate dehydrogenase. The investigators will also measure circulating immune complexes as these have been linked to inflammation and a serological profile of the donor/product and the patient will also be performed. A complete list of biomarkers is included below.
summary of testing to be performed at various time points during each transfusion episode:
Patient Tests:
1. C-Reactive Protein
2. Circulating Immune Complexes
3. IL-6
4. IL-1β
5. TNF-α
6. IL-8
7. CD40 Ligand
8. Complete Blood Count
9. Bilirubin
10. Lactose Dehydrogenase
11. Haptoglobin
12. Anti-A titre (for A and AB group)
13. Anti-B titre (for B and AB group)
14. A1 Phenotyping
15. Lewis Phenotyping
Product Tests:
1. Anti-A titre (for A and AB group)
2. Anti-B titre (for B and AB group)
3. A1 Phenotyping
4. Lewis Phenotyping
Patients tests will be done at baseline (right before the transfusion starts), 1 hour after transfusion, and 12-24 hours after transfusion
Product tests will be done one time on each RBC unit that will be used in the transfusion episodes.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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ABO non-identical transfusion
All study patients will participate in the study for two consecutive transfusion episodes (a transfusion episode is defined as a clinic visit where 2 RBC units are transfused) and will receive an ABO identical product at one transfusion episode and an ABO non-identical product for the other episode. Randomization will dictate the order of the transfusion. The number of RBCs given for each study transfusion episode will be identical 2 RBC units.
RBC transfusion
two consecutive transfusion episodes: an ABO identical product at one transfusion episode and an ABO non-identical product for the other episode. The number of RBCs given for each study transfusion episode will be identical 2 RBC units.
ABO identical transfusion
All study patients will participate in the study for two consecutive transfusion episodes (a transfusion episode is defined as a clinic visit where 2 RBC units are transfused) and will receive an ABO identical product at one transfusion episode and an ABO non-identical product for the other episode. Randomization will dictate the order of the transfusion. The number of RBCs given for each study transfusion episode will be identical 2 RBC units.
RBC transfusion
two consecutive transfusion episodes: an ABO identical product at one transfusion episode and an ABO non-identical product for the other episode. The number of RBCs given for each study transfusion episode will be identical 2 RBC units.
Interventions
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RBC transfusion
two consecutive transfusion episodes: an ABO identical product at one transfusion episode and an ABO non-identical product for the other episode. The number of RBCs given for each study transfusion episode will be identical 2 RBC units.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Diagnosis of MDS (Myelodysplastic syndrome ) without leukemia (IPSS-R classified or physician indicated either low-risk or intermediate-1)
3. Stable disease (as assessed by the patient's physician using MDS Stability Assessment Algorithm)
4. Blood group A, B, or AB
5. Requiring 2 RBC units at least every 6 weeks or less
6. Receiving transfusions in an outpatient setting
Exclusion Criteria
2. Blood group O
3. Clinical requirement for special products because of reactions (e.g. washed or volume-reduced)
18 Years
120 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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CBS
UNKNOWN
McMaster University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Donald Arnold
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
McMaster University
Locations
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Juravinski Hospital and Cancer Centre
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Lapierre V, Mahe C, Auperin A, Stambouli F, Oubouzar N, Tramalloni D, Benhamou E, Tiberghien P, Hartmann O. Platelet transfusion containing ABO-incompatible plasma and hepatic veno-occlusive disease after hematopoietic transplantation in young children. Transplantation. 2005 Aug 15;80(3):314-9. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000167758.63247.f4.
Zeller MP, Barty R, Aandahl A, Apelseth TO, Callum J, Dunbar NM, Elahie A, Garritsen H, Hancock H, Kutner JM, Manukian B, Mizuta S, Okuda M, Pagano MB, Poglod R, Rushford K, Selleng K, Sorensen CH, Sprogoe U, Staves J, Weiland T, Wendel S, Wood EM, van de Watering L, van Wordragen-Vlaswinkel M, Ziman A, Jan Zwaginga J, Murphy MF, Heddle NM, Yazer MH; Biomedical Excellence for Safer Transfusion (BEST) Collaborative. An international investigation into O red blood cell unit administration in hospitals: the GRoup O Utilization Patterns (GROUP) study. Transfusion. 2017 Oct;57(10):2329-2337. doi: 10.1111/trf.14255. Epub 2017 Aug 25.
Pai M, Cook R, Barty R, Eikelboom J, Lee KA, Heddle N. Exposure to ABO-nonidentical blood associated with increased in-hospital mortality in patients with group A blood. Transfusion. 2016 Mar;56(3):550-7. doi: 10.1111/trf.13376. Epub 2015 Oct 15.
Refaai MA, Cahill C, Masel D, Schmidt AE, Heal JM, Kirkley SA, Blumberg N. Is It Time to Reconsider the Concepts of "Universal Donor" and "ABO Compatible" Transfusions? Anesth Analg. 2018 Jun;126(6):2135-2138. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000002600. No abstract available.
Heal JM, Liesveld JL, Phillips GL, Blumberg N. What would Karl Landsteiner do? The ABO blood group and stem cell transplantation. Bone Marrow Transplant. 2005 Nov;36(9):747-55. doi: 10.1038/sj.bmt.1705101.
Julmy F, Ammann RA, Taleghani BM, Fontana S, Hirt A, Leibundgut K. Transfusion efficacy of ABO major-mismatched platelets (PLTs) in children is inferior to that of ABO-identical PLTs. Transfusion. 2009 Jan;49(1):21-33. doi: 10.1111/j.1537-2995.2008.01914.x. Epub 2008 Sep 4.
Other Identifiers
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UD_3414
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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