Bacterial Contamination of Blood Products and the Value of Pre-Transfusion Testing
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Immunological Investigations
- Vol. 24 (1-2), 163-170
- https://doi.org/10.3109/08820139509062770
Abstract
There has been a dramatic increase recently in the number of reports of septic episodes associated with both red cell and platelet concentrate transfusions. These reports suggest that transfusion-associated septic reactions may occur as often as 1 per 4000 platelet transfusions, however, the true incidence of the bacterial contamination of stored cellular blood components has not yet been established. Recently developed automated techniques for the detection of bacteria are much more rapid than direct plating techniques. Such rapid techniques can be used to monitor the sterility of cellular blood products with greater sensitivity than Gram staining; using a small aliquot of the blood product taken soon after collection. Using such equipment, the incidence of bacterial contamination of 15,838 random donor platelet concentrates collected over a six-month period was determined and evidence of bacterial contamination was found in 32. Seven were classified as confirmed, 10 as unconfirmed and 12 as non-confirmed positives. The confirmed positivity rate was thus 4.4 per 10,000. This rate represents the minimum incidence of bacterial contamination of platelet concentrates and the true rate is likely higher, as some of the unconfirmed positives are likely to have been found to be positives, had the original platelet concentrate been available for culture. The true positive rate is therefore estimated to be between 4.4 and 10.7 per 10,000. Given this rate of bacterial contamination, it is our contention that all platelet concentrate units be monitored for bacteriologic sterility prior to their issue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- A prospective microbiologic surveillance program to detect and prevent the transfusion of bacterially contaminated plateletsTransfusion, 1993
- Nosocomial epidemic of Serratia marcescens septicemia ascribed to contaminated blood transfusion bagsTransfusion, 1993
- Posttransfusion Serratia marcescens septicemiaTransfusion, 1993
- The Risk of Transfusion-Transmitted InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- Septic Reactions to Platelet TransfusionsJAMA, 1991
- Transfusion Reactions Due to Bacterial Contamination of Blood and Blood ProductsClinical Infectious Diseases, 1991
- Blood Product-Associated Bacterial SepsisTransfusion Medicine Reviews, 1991
- Transfusion-related sepsis after prolonged platelet storageAmerican Journal Of Medicine, 1986
- Fatalities From Blood TransfusionPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1980
- Fatal Transfusion Reactions from Massive Bacterial Contamination of BloodNew England Journal of Medicine, 1951