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Pneumonia as a complication of blood product transfusion in the critically ill: transfusion-related immunomodulation (TRIM).

Vamvakas EC

Medical, Scientific and Research Affairs, Canadian Blood Services, University of Ottawa Faculty of Medicine, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

BACKGROUND: An increased risk of postoperative infection (including pneumonia) attributable to the receipt of allogeneic blood transfusion has been investigated as a possible manifestation of transfusion-related immunomodulation (TRIM) in 16 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and approximately 40 observational studies. OBJECTIVES: This review categorizes RCTs and observational studies with regard to the inference that they permit about possible mediators of TRIM-allogeneic white cells (WBCs), WBC-derived soluble mediators, and/or allogeneic plasma-and examines whether the totality of the clinical evidence supports an association between allogeneic blood transfusion and postoperative infection. RESULTS: When all available studies are considered together in meta-analyses, three types of studies show no increased risk of postoperative infection in association with allogeneic blood transfusion: a) RCTs comparing recipients of buffy-coat-reduced and prestorage-filtered, WBC-reduced allogeneic red cells; b) RCTs comparing recipients of allogeneic and autologous blood; and c) observational studies comparing patients transfused before and after implementation of WBC reduction. RCTs comparing recipients of nonbuffy-coat-reduced and WBC-reduced red blood cells may point to a TRIM effect, but they cannot yet be subjected to formal meta-analysis. CONCLUSIONS: No overwhelming clinical evidence has been presented to establish the existence of a TRIM effect that relates allogeneic blood transfusion to postoperative infection.

Published 17 April 2006 in Crit Care Med, 34(5): S151-9.
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Gift Relationship: From Human Blood to Social Policy (Expanded and Updated)