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Immunomodulation Following Transfusion

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University of Washington

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Blood Component Transfusion

Treatments

Biological: Standard blood components
Biological: Leukoreduced and irradiated
Biological: Leukoreduced blood components

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00810810
29792
1P50HL081015 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is designed to provide information on patients' immune response after exposure to transfused blood.

Blood transfusions may have opposite immune effects on patients. One is sensitization. The other is immunosuppression. The magnitude of these effects in patients who are not on chemotherapy is unknown.

These effects are thought to be due largely to white blood cells present in the transfusion product. "Leukofiltration" and "gamma-irradiation" are the special treatments that deplete white blood cells. A combination of leukofiltration and gamma-irradiation pretreatment of donor blood is thought to deplete the white blood cells most effectively.

In this study, patients scheduled for cardiac surgery are randomly assigned to receive blood products pretreated in one of three ways: untreated, filtered or filtered and irradiated. If their physician orders transfusions, they will receive products assigned to their group. Patients are asked to provide two blood samples during the 4 weeks after surgery.

Studies will measure changes in antibody to HLA and in cells that regulate the immune response. The levels of sensitization and immunosuppression will be correlated to the transfusion products received.

Full description

Blood transfusions may have opposite immune effects on patients. One is sensitization. The other is immunosuppression. The magnitude of this problem in patients who are not on chemotherapy is unknown.

Of patients who do receive donor blood, 50-90 percent become sensitized (make antibody) to HLA proteins present on white blood cells in the donor blood. This is an undesired effect in patients who need an organ or stem cell transplant, as it increases the risk of rejection. Another effect of receiving a blood transfusion, immunosuppression, causes a decreased immune response that compromises patients' ability to fight off infection or tumor cells.

These effects - sensitization and immunosuppression - are thought to be due largely to white blood cells present in the transfusion product. Doctors order specially pretreated blood transfusions that have been depleted of white blood cells with the aim of minimizing risks in an "immunocompromised" patient. "Leukofiltration" and "gamma-irradiation" are the special treatments that deplete white blood cells. A combination of leukofiltration and gamma-irradiation pretreatment of donor blood is thought to deplete the white blood cells most effectively. Therefore, blood is pretreated both ways before it is given to patients who need a stem cell transplant or others who are immunosuppressed.

Sometimes the pretreated leukofiltration and gamma-irradiated blood is used for "regular" patients who are not immunocompromised so the blood is used before it expires and not wasted. However, doctors do not know for sure whether these expensive pretreatments are really beneficial for "regular" patients such as those undergoing cardiac surgery and whether they would change the risk of developing sensitization or immunosuppression.

In this study, patients are randomly assigned to receive blood products pretreated in one of three ways: untreated, filtered or filtered and irradiated. If their physician orders transfusions, they will receive products assigned to their group. Patients are asked to provide two blood samples during the 4 weeks after surgery. Studies will measure changes in antibody to HLA and in cells that regulate the immune response.

It is unknown which treatment (leukofiltration with or without gamma-irradiation compared to no pretreatment) is most beneficial in patients who are not immunosuppressed.

This study is designed to provide information on patients' immune response after exposure to transfused blood. This information may be useful to caring for patients in the future who require transfusion for cardiac surgery.

Enrollment

287 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • At least 18 year of age
  • Scheduled for open heart surgery of cardiopulmonary bypass that involves: CABG, CABG with valve, aneurysm repair
  • Urgent or elective surgery

Exclusion criteria

  • Scheduled for open heart surgery of cardiopulmonary bypass that involves: placement of a ventricular assist device, cardiac transplantation, aortic dissection repair
  • Emergent surgery
  • participation in other clinical research studies within 30 days of randomization.
  • Immunosuppressive treatment.
  • Refuse blood transfusion
  • Disease or condition placing subject at undue risk or decision of attending doctor.
  • Condition requiring high volume transfusion therapy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

287 participants in 3 patient groups

1
Active Comparator group
Description:
Blood components with no additional treatment
Treatment:
Biological: Standard blood components
2
Experimental group
Description:
Blood components leukoreduced
Treatment:
Biological: Leukoreduced blood components
3
Experimental group
Description:
Blood components leukoreduced and irradiated
Treatment:
Biological: Leukoreduced and irradiated

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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