Emory University, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA; Biconcavity Inc., Lilburn, GA, USA.
Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Department of Pathology, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Transfus Clin Biol. 2020 Aug;27(3):179-184. doi: 10.1016/j.tracli.2020.03.008. Epub 2020 Apr 18.
Laboratory and epidemiologic studies have clarified how persons born with malaria-resistant red blood cells (RBCs)-like group-O, sickle-trait, and C-trait RBCs-are protected against death or severe disease due to Plasmodiumfalciparum (Pf) infection. Compared to malaria-promoting RBCs-like non-O or hemoglobin-AA RBCs-inborn RBC protection against severe Pf malaria can be profound: up to 10-fold greater. Given that "the Berlin patient" success showed patients do not have to be born with disease-resistant cells to benefit from them, why have the biologically plausible benefits of exchange transfusion (ET) of malaria-resistant RBCs not yet been evaluated? Unfortunately, a 2013 ET-for-malaria meta-analysis could not quantify the impact on mortality of ET of malaria-resistant RBCs because RBC malaria resistance variables (ABO group, hemoglobin type, enzyme levels, etc.) had not been reported in any of the ET studies used in that meta-analysis. To promote evaluation of the therapeutic impact of specific malaria-resistant RBCs, we urge clinicians to always report ABO blood group (and all other RBC malaria-resistance variables they are aware of) when they use ET to rescue Pf-infected patients. Prudent selection of donor RBCs has successfully optimized ET for sickle cell disease patients, and this precedent suggests selection of special malaria-resistant donor RBCs may optimize ET for Pf-malaria patients. Given that ET is used worldwide as a rescue adjunct, we feel it is most prudent to now assume-until proven otherwise-that considering and reporting the Pf-malaria-resistance variables of the RBCs to be transfused-at least ABO status-will help optimize ET-for-malaria.
实验室和流行病学研究阐明了具有疟疾抗性红细胞(RBC)的人(如 O 型血、镰状细胞特征和 C 型特征 RBC)如何免受恶性疟原虫(Pf)感染导致的死亡或重病。与促进疟疾的 RBC(如非 O 型血或血红蛋白 AA RBC)相比,天生的 RBC 对严重 Pf 疟疾的保护作用可能更为显著:高达 10 倍。鉴于“柏林患者”的成功表明,患者不必天生具有抗性细胞就能从中受益,为什么尚未评估疟疾抗性 RBC 交换输血(ET)的生物学合理益处?不幸的是,2013 年 ET 治疗疟疾的荟萃分析无法量化 ET 对死亡率的影响,因为在该荟萃分析中使用的任何 ET 研究中都没有报告 RBC 疟疾抗性变量(ABO 组、血红蛋白类型、酶水平等)。为了促进评估特定疟疾抗性 RBC 的治疗效果,我们敦促临床医生在使用 ET 抢救 Pf 感染患者时,始终报告 ABO 血型(以及他们所知道的所有其他 RBC 疟疾抗性变量)。明智地选择供体 RBC 已经成功地优化了镰状细胞病患者的 ET,并且这一先例表明选择特殊的疟疾抗性供体 RBC 可能会优化 Pf 疟疾患者的 ET。鉴于 ET 在全球范围内被用作抢救辅助手段,我们认为,在没有确凿证据的情况下,最稳妥的做法是假设——考虑并报告要输注的 RBC 的 Pf 疟疾抗性变量(至少 ABO 状态)将有助于优化 ET 治疗疟疾。