Use of immunoglobulin G homeostatic set point and recovery time in plasmapheresis donor safety monitoring: A retrospective observational cohort study.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 HEMATOLOGY Vox Sanguinis Pub Date : 2025-01-29 DOI:10.1111/vox.13800
Janet V Warner, Michael J Drinkwater, Gerard J Chu, Shane Kelly, Jeremy S McComish
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) and total protein are used to monitor plasmapheresis donor safety. However, there is a lack of information from large donor cohorts to determine the best use of these measurements.

Materials and methods: We identified 230,144 plasmapheresis donors making their first donation between 1 July 2020 and 31 March 2024. IgG and total protein were measured prior to the first donation and then annually, following our donor safety monitoring protocol. We considered individuals who had not donated for 12 months to estimate intra-individual biological variability of IgG. We compared four models to predict which donors would develop IgG < 6 g/L.

Results: The IgG reference interval for the cohort was 7.67-15.6 g/L. IgG declines 5%-11% after the age of 45 years. The intra-individual biological variability of IgG (5.2%) is small, indicating that there is homeostatic set point for individual IgG. IgG is reduced by plasmapheresis but recovers to recruitment level after 12 weeks. When plasma is donated every 2-3 weeks, mean IgG plateaus 1 g/L below recruitment concentration. IgG at recruitment is the best predictor of which donors will have IgG < 6 g/L after a year of donations. Total protein is a low-value test in this context.

Conclusion: Plasmapheresis is safe and sustainable for almost every donor, at the 2-weekly frequency allowed in Australia. The donors most likely to experience unacceptably low IgG are those with very low recruitment IgG levels. These donors could be recommended 12-week intervals between donations or other donation types.

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来源期刊
Vox Sanguinis
Vox Sanguinis 医学-血液学
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
11.10%
发文量
156
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Vox Sanguinis reports on important, novel developments in transfusion medicine. Original papers, reviews and international fora are published on all aspects of blood transfusion and tissue transplantation, comprising five main sections: 1) Transfusion - Transmitted Disease and its Prevention: Identification and epidemiology of infectious agents transmissible by blood; Bacterial contamination of blood components; Donor recruitment and selection methods; Pathogen inactivation. 2) Blood Component Collection and Production: Blood collection methods and devices (including apheresis); Plasma fractionation techniques and plasma derivatives; Preparation of labile blood components; Inventory management; Hematopoietic progenitor cell collection and storage; Collection and storage of tissues; Quality management and good manufacturing practice; Automation and information technology. 3) Transfusion Medicine and New Therapies: Transfusion thresholds and audits; Haemovigilance; Clinical trials regarding appropriate haemotherapy; Non-infectious adverse affects of transfusion; Therapeutic apheresis; Support of transplant patients; Gene therapy and immunotherapy. 4) Immunohaematology and Immunogenetics: Autoimmunity in haematology; Alloimmunity of blood; Pre-transfusion testing; Immunodiagnostics; Immunobiology; Complement in immunohaematology; Blood typing reagents; Genetic markers of blood cells and serum proteins: polymorphisms and function; Genetic markers and disease; Parentage testing and forensic immunohaematology. 5) Cellular Therapy: Cell-based therapies; Stem cell sources; Stem cell processing and storage; Stem cell products; Stem cell plasticity; Regenerative medicine with cells; Cellular immunotherapy; Molecular therapy; Gene therapy.
期刊最新文献
Efficacy of communication interventions for promoting blood donation in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review. Donors in the COVID-19 era: How did donor characteristics change in Japan? Is there a need for an alternative source of red blood cells for clinical transfusion and will gene-edited pigs fulfil that need? Use of immunoglobulin G homeostatic set point and recovery time in plasmapheresis donor safety monitoring: A retrospective observational cohort study. An experimental comparison and user evaluation of three different dried plasma products.
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