Litcius/Paper detail

Degradation of red blood cell deformability during cold storage in blood bags

Emel Islamzada, Kerryn Matthews, Erik S. Lamoureux, Simon P. Duffy, Mark D. Scott, Hongshen Ma

2021eJHaem20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Red blood cells (RBCs) stored in blood bags develop a storage lesion that include structural, metabolic, and morphologic transformations resulting in a progressive loss of RBC deformability. The speed of RBC deformability loss is donor-dependent, which if properly characterized, could be used as a biomarker to select high-quality RBC units for sensitive recipients or to provide customized storage timelines depending on the donor. We used the microfluidic ratchet device to measure the deformability of red blood cells stored in blood bags every 14 days over a span of 56 days. We observed that storage in blood bags generally prevented RBC deformability loss over the current standard 42-day storage window. However, between 42 and 56 days, the deformability loss profile varied dramatically between donors. In particular, we observed accelerated RBC deformability loss for a majority of male donors, but for none of the female donors. Together, our results suggest that RBC deformability loss could be used to screen for donors who can provide stable RBCs for sensitive transfusion recipients or to identify donors capable of providing RBCs that could be stored for longer than the current 42-day expiration window.

Topics & Concepts

Red blood cellBruiseCold storageBlood lossChemistryBiomedical engineeringMedicineSurgeryBiologyBiochemistryHorticultureBlood transfusion and managementErythrocyte Function and PathophysiologyBlood groups and transfusion
Degradation of red blood cell deformability during cold storage in blood bags | Litcius