Waiswa Musa K, Moses Ali, Seremba Emmanuel, Ddungu Henry, Hume Heather A
Department of Medicine, Mulago National Referral Hospital, Kampala, Uganda; Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Transfusion. 2014 Nov;54(11):2804-10. doi: 10.1111/trf.12684. Epub 2014 May 8.
Very little has been published about acute transfusion reactions (ATRs) in developing countries. This study was undertaken to determine the incidence, type, imputability, severity, and possible associated factors of ATRs observed in a university-affiliated hospital in Uganda.
We prospectively followed the transfusion of blood units issued over a 7-week period from the hospital blood bank during regular working hours to nonbleeding patients. For each transfusion, we recorded the patient's status before, during, at the end of, and 4 hours after transfusion. Three physicians independently reviewed all reports of suspected ATRs and related hospital charts. Using predefined criteria, the presence, type, imputability, and severity of ATRs were adjudicated by consensus of two of three physicians. Factors potentially associated with ATRs were analyzed for statistical significance.
A total of 507 transfusions were analyzed. Fifty-three acute transfusion events were recorded and 49 of 53 or 9.6% of the 507 transfusions were confirmed to be ATRs by physician consensus: 24 febrile, seven allergic, five hypertensive, three hypotensive, three transfusion-associated circulatory overload, two acute hemolytic, and five others. Imputability of ATRs was definite, probable, or possible in 45 of 49 ATRs (92% of ATRs or 8.9% of transfusions) and judged to be severe in nine of 45. No significant associated factors were identified.
Our findings suggest that ATRs may occur more commonly in resource-limited settings than in high-income countries. Although some reactions are unavoidable, improved surveillance of transfusions and implementation of transfusion guidelines could improve the safety of transfusions in these settings.
关于发展中国家急性输血反应(ATR)的报道非常少。本研究旨在确定在乌干达一家大学附属医院观察到的ATR的发生率、类型、可归因性、严重程度以及可能的相关因素。
我们前瞻性地跟踪了在正常工作时间从医院血库发放给非出血患者的血液单位的输注情况,为期7周。对于每次输血,我们记录了患者在输血前、输血期间、输血结束时以及输血后4小时的状态。三名医生独立审查了所有疑似ATR的报告及相关医院病历。根据预定义标准,由三名医生中的两名达成共识来判定ATR的存在、类型、可归因性和严重程度。分析了可能与ATR相关的因素的统计学意义。
共分析了507次输血。记录了53起急性输血事件,经医生共识确认,53起中的49起(占507次输血的9.6%)为ATR:24例发热性、7例过敏性、5例高血压性、3例低血压性、3例输血相关循环超负荷、2例急性溶血性以及5例其他类型。49例ATR中的45例(占ATR的92%或输血的8.9%)的ATR可归因性为明确、很可能或可能,其中45例中有9例被判定为严重。未发现显著的相关因素。
我们的研究结果表明,ATR在资源有限的环境中可能比在高收入国家更常见。尽管有些反应不可避免,但加强输血监测和实施输血指南可提高这些环境下输血的安全性。