Since 1998, leuko-reduction is used in France for all platelet concentrates (PCs), apheresis-derived (APCs) and pooled whole blood-derived buffy-coats (BCPCs). Platelet additive solutions (PAS), introduced in 2005, accounted for over 80% of the platelet supply from 2011 to 2017. The Intercept pathogen reduction technology (PR), started in a pilot study in 2007, was generalized in 2018. Between 2007 and 2021, the use of BCPCs increased steadily from 23% to 70% of the supply. Objectives: to analyze the impact of these modifications on adverse transfusion reactions (ATRs), patient management and blood transfusion organization. Results: The overall incidence of ATRs /105 PCs is significantly lower with PAS- and PR-PCs as compared to PCs in plasma (PL), with the decreasing hierarchy PL > PAS > PR. PAS- and PR-PCs lead to significantly lower incidences of allergy and alloimmunization to RBC antigens (RC-AI) ATRs. The incidence of bacteria transmission (TTBI) is significantly reduced by 95% with PR-PCs. APC-related ATR incidence is significantly higher than BCPC for allergy (+233%), TTBI (+100%), APTR (+75%), Major-ABO-II (+65%), HLA/HPA-AI (+38%), FNHTR (+22%), and life-threatening ATRs (+106%). A single diagnosis is significantly less associated with APCs: RC-AI (-47%). The generalization of PR-PCs, which exhibit a lower platelet content than PAS- and PL-PCs, is associated with a significant 9% decrease in the ATR incidence per PC, a 13% increase in the number of PCs transfused per patient, and a nonsignificant 3% increase in the ATR incidence per patient. The outdated PCs percentage declined significantly from 3.7% to 1.7%.
Keywords: Hemovigilance; Platelet additive solutions; Platelet pathogen reduction; Platelet transfusion; Transfusion-transmitted infections.
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