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1.
HemaSphere ; 7(Supplement 1):20, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20242230

ABSTRACT

Background: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is one of the most common single gene disorders worldwide and is characterised by significant morbidity and early mortality.[1] Pregnancy in SCD is associated with an increased risk of maternal and foetal complications.[2,3] The 2011 RCOG and the 2021 BSH guidelines[5,6] on the management of pregnancy in SCD have provided the basis for best practice care in the UK over the past decade and is the guidance which we follow in Ireland. To date, there is no published data on outcomes for pregnant women with SCD in Ireland. The number of Irish patients with SCD has risen over the past 20 years. Without a national database, the exact prevalence is not known but currently there are at least 600 adults and children with SCD in Ireland, whose population is just over 5 million.[4] Aims: Our study assesses outcomes of pregnant patients with SCD from 2015 to 2022. Our aims were to: * Assess adherence to current guidelines * Assess pregnancy outcomes and maternal complications * Assess transfusion rates amongst our patient cohort. Method(s): This is a retrospective cohort study. We do not have a directly matched cohort, but have compared our findings to published data on Irish pregnancy outcomes from the Irish Maternity Indicator System National Report and have correlated our findings with studies of women with SCD who were managed in UK centres.[8,9,10] Results: We reviewed outcomes of 29 pregnancies in 19 women over a 7-year period. The median age was 29 (range 20-41) and the predominant maternal sickle genotype was HbSS (65.5%). Before conception, 55.2% of cases had pre-existing complications of SCD, including acute chest syndrome (ACS), pulmonary hypertension (PHTN) and prior stroke. In accordance with current guidelines, 100% of women (n=29) were prescribed folic acid, penicillin, and aspirin prophylaxis. 51.7% (n=15) of women had documented maternal complications during pregnancy, including ACS (34%), vaso-occlusive crisis (34%), gestational diabetes (10%), VTE (3%) and UTI (3%). Two women (7%) developed Covid-19 pneumonitis despite vaccination. There was one case of maternal bacteraemia (3%). 65.5% of cases (n=19) required blood transfusion during pregnancy. One woman was already on a blood transfusion programme for disease modification prior to pregnancy. In 6 cases (20.6%), a transfusion programme was commenced during pregnancy due to prior pregnancy complications or intrauterine growth restriction. During pregnancy, 27.6% (n=8) of women required emergency red cell exchange for ACS. Prior studies have suggested that between 30% and 70% of pregnant women with SCD require at least one blood transfusion during pregnancy.[8,9,10] By comparison, only 2.6% of the Irish general obstetric population required transfusion during pregnancy.[7] 20.6% (n=6) of births were preterm at <37 weeks' gestation. There was one live preterm birth (3%) at <34 weeks and one intrauterine death (3%) at 23 weeks' gestation. Similar to UK data[9], 31% of women required critical care stay (n=9) during pregnancy, in comparison with 1.44% nationwide in 2020.[7] Conclusion(s): It is well established that pregnancy in SCD is high risk, and despite adherence to current guidelines, we have shown very high rates of critical care admission, significant transfusion requirement and hospital admissions. Our findings are comparable to published UK outcomes and they further support the need for a comprehensive specialist care setting for this patient cohort.

2.
HemaSphere ; 7(Supplement 1):55, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20241687

ABSTRACT

Transfusion-dependent thalassemia is the most severe form of thalassemia in which patients require a regular blood transfusion to maintain their haemoglobin level. COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the routine measure in controlling chronic diseases like thalassemia. This study aims to measure the difference in pre-transfusion haemoglobin level and frequency of transfusion before and during pandemics. This retrospective cross-sectional study utilized medical records data of 101 transfusion-dependent thalassemia (TDT) patients treated in Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital (CMH) from 2019-2021. The dependent variables of this study were pre-transfusion haemoglobin level and transfusion attendance. The pre-pandemic phase was defined from March 30, 2019, to March 29, 2020, whereas the during-pandemic phase was from March 30, 2020, to March 29, 2021. Up to 59.4% of subjects had suboptimal Hb level of < 9.0 g/dL even before the pandemic and it increased to 71.3% during a pandemic. Transfusion frequency of pre-pandemic and during-pandemic phases showed no significant difference (p-value = 0.990). The mean pre-transfusion haemoglobin level before the pandemic was 8.71 g/dL and it decreased to 8.46 g/dL (p-value <0.001). Our study showed poorer control of pre-transfusion Hb levels during the pandemic and decreased transfusion frequency. This puts them at a higher risk of developing many longterm complications.

3.
Research Journal of Pharmacy and Technology ; 16(4):1992-1998, 2023.
Article in English | GIM | ID: covidwho-20240334

ABSTRACT

Currently, there is no availability of any proven specific treatment or prevention strategy to fight against COVID-19. Convalescent plasma (CP) therapy is expected to increase survival rates in COVID-19 as in the case of emerging viral infection (SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV). To collect all the studies relevant to CP therapy in critically ill or severe COVID-19 patients and summarize the findings. The systematic review was conducted according to the PRISMA consensus statement. A systematic search was performed in PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases on April 25, 2020. A total of six studies (28 patients) relevant to CP therapy in severe or critical COVID-19 are considered for inclusion. Two authors extracted the data about study characteristics, demographics, symptoms, co-morbidities, clinical classification of COVID-19, drug therapies, oxygen therapy, laboratory results, chest CT, neutralizing antibody titer, SARS-CoV-2 RNA load, aal outcome. The review findings revealed that CP therapy increases lymphocyte count, reduced s serum inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6, Procalcitonin) and liver enzyme levels (AST or ALT). There was a rise in serum neutralizing antibody titers in 10 of 14 patients after CP transfusion. In 4 of 14 patients, the titer levels remain unchanged after CP transfusion. All 28 cases (100%) achieved negative to the SARS-CoV-2 RNA after CP transfusion. The convalescent plasma transfusion can improve neutralizing antibody titers and reduces the viral load in severe/critical COVID-19 patients. The review recommends a well-controlled trial design is required to give a definite statement on the safety and efficacy of convalescent plasma therapy in severe/critical COVID-19.

4.
Diabetic Medicine ; 40(Supplement 1):99-100, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20240054

ABSTRACT

HbA1c measurement is widely used for diagnosis/ management/remission of diabetes with international schemes certifying comparability. A) 75 year-old Chinese female with type 2 diabetes was admitted in April 2020 with Covid-19 and diabetic ketoacidosis. Glucose was 35mmol/l and HbA1c 150mmol/mol with previous HbA1c of 45mmol/mol on metformin and alogliptin. She was treated for ketoacidosis and once-daily Lantus introduced along with supportive management of viral illness. B) 68 year-old Afro-Caribbean with type 2 diabetes on metformin before admission, presented with new onset, jerky ballistic movements of high amplitude in right arm, 10-15 movements every 5 min. Admission glucose was >33mmol/l, ketones 1.8mmol/l and HbA1c >217mmol/ mol. Hemichorea-hemiballism, a hyperglycaemia related movement was diagnosed and insulin commenced. Glucose decreased to 8-20mmol/ l, reaching 5-15mmol/ l by time of discharge. Ballistic movements resolved when glycaemic control improved with HbA1c 169mmol/mol, 25 days after discharge. C) Several days before admission, a female with diabetes over 20 years required attention from paramedics on four occasions for hypoglycaemia. Months beforehand metformin was replaced by gliclazide due to chronic kidney disease with HbA1c 50mmol/mol, and she was transfused six weeks before admission for microcytic anaemia. Gliclazide was discontinued and her diet modified which prevented further hypoglycaemic episodes. Variant haemoglobin, beta-thalassaemia which can overestimate glycaemia;undetected by HbA1c HPLC method, invalidated HbA1c as did the blood transfusion. These cases highlight that inadequate understanding of HbA1c can lead to acute presentations of dysglycaemia. As HbA1c accuracy can be affected by multiple factors, clinical assessment and triangulation are key to the management of such patients.

5.
HemaSphere ; 7(Supplement 1):12, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20239354

ABSTRACT

Background: Approximately two years ago, COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), and through genomic surveillance, we have seen the emergence of variants of SARS-CoV-2. In the United States, over 78 million cases and >900,000 deaths attributable to COVID-19 have been reported. SCD was identified as a risk factor for severe COVID-19 disease in adults and pediatric patients. The emergence of novel SARs- CoV-2 variants has led to challenges in diagnosis, treatment, and prediction of long-term sequelae in individuals with SCD and COVID-19. Aim(s): We compare the overall seasonal variation of COVID-19 variants and patterns of healthcare utilization and clinical presentation over time in pediatric patients with SCD and COVID-19 at Children's National Hospital (CNH). Method(s): Our single-center, observational cohort study included 193 pediatric patients with SCD (0-21 years) with PCR-confirmed SARSCoV- 2 infection between March 31, 2020, and January 31, 2022. Per the SECURE SCD Registry definitions, clinical severity was classified as asymptomatic, mild, moderate, and severe. Result(s): A total of 193 unique patients with SCD and positive SARS-CoV-2 PCRs between March 2020-January 2022 were included in our registry. Most patients were female (51.8%), and the mean age was 11.2 years (SD 6.5 years). Most of the cohort resides in Maryland (N=135), and HbSS was the dominant genotype (69.4%). During the alpha dominant variant of the COVID-19 pandemic (March 2020- June 2021) there were 70 cases, followed by 40 cases during the Delta variant (July 2021- December 19, 2021), and 83 cases during the Omicron variant dominance (from December 20, 2021-January 31,2022). There were 149 patients (77%) that presented to the emergency department (ED) or were hospitalized. There were a total of 80 hospitalizations (41.5%), and a relative comparison showed that the percentage of hospitalizations was highest during the delta wave (47.5%) and lowest during the omicron wave (36.1%) (p= 0.407). ED-only utilization was highest in the era of omicron (43.4%, N=36), followed by delta (32.5%, N=13), and then alpha (30%, N=21)(p=0.197). The most common SCD-related complication was vaso-occlusive (VOC) pain (33%, N=64) which accounted for half of all hospital admissions (51%, N=41 of 80). Acute chest syndrome (ACS) was reported in 40% (N=32) of admitted patients and was highest in the alpha era (54.8%, N=17). The use of blood transfusion therapy was highest in the alpha (N=17) and delta (N=14) variants, while Remdesivir use was highest in omicron (N=15). A total of 6 patients received monoclonal antibodies (Delta, N=4;omicron, N=2). Throughout all the variants, there was a significant difference in COVID-19 clinical severity (p>0.005). Of the patients classified as asymptomatic (13%, N=25), seventy-two percent (n=18) were diagnosed during the alpha variant. Mild severity was the most prevalent (69%, N=134), with the omicron variant having the highest cases (51.5%, N=69). Severe cases were observed in all variants (6.7%, N=13) but were most prevalent during the alpha variant (46.2%, N=6). Summary - Conclusion(s): Interestingly, while the relative percentage of hospitalizations was lowest during the omicron wave, it saw the highest percentages of ER utilization. Overall, COVID-19 remains mild in pediatric patients with SCD, and notably, there was higher health care utilization in the omicron era.

6.
HemaSphere ; 7(Supplement 1):47, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20239291

ABSTRACT

Background: Health care systems have been facing COVID19 pandemic around the world for almost two years. Transfusion dependent (TDT) beta-thalassemia patients represent a vulnerable group,totally dependent upon hospital-based services. Aim(s): Aim of the present study was to evaluate the impact of COVID19 pandemic on management of TDT patients in a single pediatric treatment center in Northern Greece. Method(s): Patient records were reviewed in order to assess changes in management before and during the 24-month pandemic in Greece (03/01/2018-29/02/2020 and 03/01/2020 -28/02/2022, respectively) in terms of transfusion volume and transfusion frequency, mean value of pretransfusional hemoglobin, as well as laboratory parameters reflecting iron overload (ferritin levels, liver and heart MRI). Result(s): The study included 28 patients, 19 male (67.8%) and 9 female (32.2%), with an age range of 8 to 21 years. Mean number of hospital visits for transfusion was 19.97 +/- 3,52/ year prior to the pandemic and 22.38 +/- 4.35/year during the pandemic (p: 0.003). Average transfusion volume was 176.18ml +/- 38.32/kg/year kappaalphai 178.67 +/- 37.64ml/kg/year, respectively (p: 0.54). With regards to hemoglobin level, mean value was 9.56 +/- 0.42g/dl prior to the pandemic and 9.45 +/- 0.48gr/dl during the pandemic period. As to iron overload, mean ferritin level was 1362.05 +/- 517.56 ng/mL prior to the pandemic and 1021.27 +/- 508.92 ng/mL during the latter time period (p:0.016). Out of 28 enrolled patients, 26 underwent heart and liver MRI before pandemic and 23 during the pandemic period. Mean LIC values were 6.84 +/- 7.37 mg/gdw and 6.43 +/- 6.46 mg/gdw (p: 0.97) before and during the pandemic, respectively (p:0.97). Myocardial MRI values were within normal limits both before and during the pandemic. Summary-Conclusion: Covid19 pandemic did not seem to negatively affect the primary goal of transfusion therapy (pretransfusion Hb), even if an increased number of visits was required in order to transfuse the same blood volume - due to limited availability of blood units per visit. Of interest, pandemic conditions appeared to favor patient adherence to chelation therapy.

7.
Journal of the Intensive Care Society ; 24(1 Supplement):43-44, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20238066

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Mucormycosis is a rare, severe fungal infection with an incidence of 0.005 to 0.17 per million.1 but incidence has risen recently, particularly in the Asian subcontinent, due to use of immunosuppression for Covid19.2 Presentations can vary and are classified into: rhino-orbito-cerebral, pulmonary, cutaneous, disseminated, renal and gastrointestinal. Risk factors include diabetes, immunosuppression, iron overload, malnutrition, and prematurity.1,3 Although mucormycosis has an extremely high mortality rate and disseminated infection is usually fatal, treatment options exist if diagnosed early and surgical debridement may be curative. Objective(s): We present a case of mucormycois in a female patient in her 40s who was immunosuppressed with methotrexate for rheumatoid disease. This case is discussed to increase awareness of critical illness caused by opportunistic invasive fungal infections in immunosuppressed patients and promote timely identification and management. Method(s): We detail the clinical context and management of a patient with mucormycosis and discuss relevant literature. Result(s): A female patient in her 40s who had been experiencing upper respiratory tract symptoms for several weeks, including cough and brown sputum, was admitted with a presumptive diagnosis of methotrexate toxicity after a full blood count performed by the general practitioner demonstrated pancytopenia. Initially, National Early Warning System 2 score (NEWS2) was 2 but became intensely hypertensive during blood transfusion and then profoundly shocked with an escalating NEWS2. Broad-spectrum antibiotics and fluconazole were commenced for neutropenic sepsis and the patient was referred to critical care in multiple organ failure. Computerised tomography (CT) scan of the chest, abdomen and pelvis showed "left upper lobe consolidation, which with neutropenia might represent an angioinvasive aspergillosis". She had multiple areas of skin discolouration and desquamation. Haematology and Infectious Diseases opinions were sought, and a bone marrow biopsy was performed which showed severe toxic effects consistent with sepsis/life threatening infection. Progressive proptosis was noted, and CT scan of her head was requested. Sadly, she was never stable enough for CT transfer. Beta D Glucan and aspergillus antigen serology was negative. Broncho-alveolar lavage demonstrated Candida albicans and then, later, Rhizopus arrhizus was isolated and anti-fungal treatment changed to voriconazole and then amphotericin B. Upon reviewing the notes in light of the positive culture for Rhizopus, the patient had likely been exhibiting symptomatic Mucormycosis sinus infection for some time prior to this admission with disseminated infection. The patient's condition continued to deteriorate and she sadly died. Conclusion(s): * The Early Warning Score significantly underestimated how unwell the patient was upon arrival in ED, a systems-based assessment would have demonstrated that the patient had multiple system dysfunction and significant potential to deteriorate suddenly despite having stable observations * The methotrexate level has no clinical value in diagnosing or refuting a diagnosis of methotrexate toxicity * A full examination of the immunosuppressed patient including ENT is a necessity when searching for a source of infection * Invasive fungal infections can cause multi-system symptoms and atypical presentations * As a greater proportion of patients have received systemic immunosuppression for Covid-19, vigilance for more unusual pathogens, including Mucormycosis by clinicians is advised.

8.
Clinical Immunology ; Conference: 2023 Clinical Immunology Society Annual Meeting: Immune Deficiency and Dysregulation North American Conference. St. Louis United States. 250(Supplement) (no pagination), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20236592

ABSTRACT

Introduction: STAT1 gain-of-function (GOF) disease is associated with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) and a broad spectrum of infectious, inflammatory, and vascular manifestations. The Janus Kinase inhibitor ruxolitinib has been used successfully for CMC and autoimmune phenomena. We describe a case of warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia (WAIHA) in a patient with STAT1 GOF disease after initiating ruxolitinib. Case report: A 36-year-old man with STAT1 c.850G>A (p.Glu284Lys) mutation presented with CMC as well as recurrent viral and bacterial infections, lymphadenopathy, enteritis, nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) and splenomegaly. Immune workup confirmed a combined immunodeficiency with hypogammaglobulinemia and T-cell lymphopenia. Ruxolitinib was initiated at 5 mg twice daily (due to pre-existing thrombocytopenia) with up titration over 3 months to 20 mg twice daily. He improved with weight gain, increased energy, resolution of chronic anemia, and improved lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly on imaging. Serum CXCL9 only minimally decreased from 4660 pg/ml to 3990 pg/ml. Soon after reaching ruxolitinib 20 mg twice daily, he developed JC viremia, prompting dose reduction to 15 mg BID. Within two weeks, he developed a non-COVID upper respiratory tract infection followed by fatigue, shortness of breath with ambulation, and dark urine. Emergency evaluation revealed warm antibody positive hemolytic anemia with a hemoglobin of 5 g/dL, and worsened thrombocytopenia. He was treated with blood transfusions, pulse steroids, and high-dose IVIG with stabilization but continued hemolysis. Due to the JC viremia, there was concern to give rituximab with increased PML risk. Bone marrow showed trilineage hematopoiesis, a mild increase in megakaryocytes and RBC precursors, and a loss of B-cell progenitors with retention of mature B cells. His B and T lymphocyte numbers had increased since prior to ruxolitinib, with a predominance of Tfh1-cells (58.7% of total Tfh-cells). He was started on sirolimus with a slow taper of prednisone with continued stable hemoglobin and platelets, and resolution of hemolysis after 3 months. Conclusion(s): To our knowledge, this is the first case of a STAT1 GOF patient developing WAIHA while receiving ruxolitinib therapy. Treatment choices were complicated by the risks of PML. Sirolimus combined with ruxolitinib allowed wean of corticosteroid and subsequent resolution of hemolysis.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc.

9.
British Journal of Haematology ; 201(Supplement 1):89, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20236584

ABSTRACT

The phase 3 MOMENTUM study (NCT04173494) of the ACVR1/JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor momelotinib (MMB) vs. danazol (DAN) in patients with myelofibrosis (MF) previously treated with a JAK inhibitor (JAKi) met the primary endpoint and all key secondary endpoints at week 24 (W24). We provide updated results from week 48 assessments. Eligible patients had primary or post-ET/ PV MF;DIPSS high, Int-2, or Int-1 risk;Total Symptom Score (TSS) >=10;haemoglobin (Hb) <10 g/dL;platelets >=25 x 109/L;prior JAKi for >=90 days (>=28 days if red blood cell [RBC] transfusions >=4 units in 8 weeks or grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia/anaemia/ hematoma);and palpable spleen >=5 cm. Randomisation was 2:1 to MMB 200 mg/day or DAN 600 mg/day for 24 weeks, followed by open-label (OL) MMB. Week 48 endpoints included durations of response (TSS, transfusion independence [TI], splenic) and overall and leukaemia-free survival (OS, LFS). As of 17 May 2022, 93/130 (72%) MMB -> MMB and 41/65 (63%) DAN -> MMB patients received OL MMB;mean MMB durations were 48 weeks and 24 weeks, respectively. Analyses for W24 responders showed the following: of TSS responders, 31/32 (97%) MMB -> MMB and 6/6 DAN -> MMB patients had TSS < baseline;of TI responders, 36/40 (90%) and 10/13 (77%) had no RBC transfusions or Hb <8 g/dL;and of spleen responders, all patients had splenic volume < baseline. In the OL phase, the most common grade >=3 treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were thrombocytopenia (MMB -> MMB, 9%;DAN -> MMB, 15%) and anaemia (MMB -> MMB, 9%;DAN -> MMB, 2%). Grade >=3 infections occurred in 19% of MMB -> MMB and 10% of DAN -> MMB patients, including grade >=3 (nonfatal) COVID-19. Peripheral neuropathy (PN) occurred in 2% of patients in each arm, and none discontinued MMB due to PN. TEAEs led to MMB discontinuation in 18% (MMB -> MMB) vs. 10% (DAN -> MMB). A trend towards improved OS up to W24 was previously observed with MMB vs. DAN (hazard ratio [HR], 0.506;p = 0.0719);after all patients crossed over to OL MMB, OS and LFS curves for both arms converged (HR, 0.945, 95% CI, 0.528-1.693;HR, 0.830, 95% CI, 0.473-1.4555). Sixty of 81 (74%) MMB -> MMB and 29 of 43 (67%) DAN -> MMB patients with baseline platelets <=150 x 109/L entered the OL phase. Efficacy and safety results in thrombocytopenic subgroups in the OL period were consistent with the intent-to- treat (ITT) population. OL MMB maintained symptom, TI, and spleen responses with continued good survival and safety in the ITT and low platelet populations. MMB may address an unmet need in anaemic patients with MF.

10.
HemaSphere Conference: 17th Annual Scientific Conference on Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia, ASCAT Online ; 7(Supplement 1), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20232429

ABSTRACT

The proceedings contain 115 papers. The topics discussed include: clinical and genetic predictors of sickle cell nephropathy in Malawi;clinicohematological characteristics of iron deficiency anemia and hemoglobinopathies in Pakistan;an experience of non-hospital based laboratory;assessment of hematological parameters of petrol filling workers at petrol stations in Ethiopia: a comparative cross-sectional study;burden and risk factor to acute myocardial ischemia in children with sickle cell anemia;dyslipidemia in transfusion-dependent-thalassemia patients and its correlation with serum vitamin D level;impact of COVID-19 pandemic to pre-transfusion hemoglobin level and frequency of transfusion in transfusion-dependent thalassemia patients in Indonesia;retinopathy in Egyptian patients with sickle cell disease;and dietary pattern, socio-demographic characteristics and nutritional status of pregnant women attending Barau Dikko teaching hospital and the need to develop recommended dietary allowance and dietary reference intakes for sickle cell disease patients.

11.
Cancer Research Conference: American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, ACCR ; 83(7 Supplement), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20232181

ABSTRACT

Commercially available human platelet lysate (hPL) is produced using expired human platelets obtained from accredited blood banks in the United States. These platelets were originally intended for use in patient transfusion. The safety of platelets used in transfusion is managed by the U.S. Food Drug Administration (FDA), as well as the American Association of Blood Banks (AABB). These organizations set standards, including testing for transmissible diseases. The United States record for blood safety is well established, with extremely low rates of disease transmission, making the platelet units used for hPL manufacture low risk. The Covid-19 pandemic has increased awareness of emerging infectious diseases, even though transmission of Covid-19 via blood transfusion has not been documented. For that reason, gamma irradiated hPL offers an additional safety measure in the clinic. Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) expressing T-cells have demonstrated potent clinical efficacy in patients with hematological malignancies. In addition, there are several phase I clinical trials evaluating the use of CAR-T-cells for targeting of solid tumorassociated antigens. Some of the challenging issues found during production of CAR-T cells are the efficiency of T cell transduction to generate CAR-T cells, the expansion of T cells to clinically relevant numbers and the long-term survival in vivo of the therapeutic cells. The use of human platelet lysate has been demonstrated to improve these issues. Our data from experiments performed using human CD3+ from donors demonstrates that human platelet lysates offer an improved performance on T cell expansion versus serum derived products. hPL efficiently promotes T cell expansion, with higher cell yields and lower cell exhaustion rate. Additionally, we efficiently developed a protocol for suspension culture of T cells, which could facilitate the large-scale expansion of allogeneic CAR-T cells.

12.
ARS Medica Tomitana ; 28(2):56-60, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20232114

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, many chronic patients and elective surgical procedures have been postponed to create spaces for the hospitalization of COVID-19 patients, raising issues related to this change. The objective of this study is to assess the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the demand for blood products transfusion. Materials ant methods: The study presents the results of a retrospective study of blood transfusions in COVID-19 patients admitted to the Constanta County Emergency Clinical Hospital. The period of study was January-December 2021. We compared the transfusion requirement for each type of blood component in COVID 19 patients versus patients with non-COVID pathology. Results and discussions: During 2021, we transfused 282 COVID-19 patients;150 patients had only Covid pneumonia (of which 19 patients with severe forms needed intensive care in ICU-Covid), and 132 patients had various co-morbidities. The maximum blood requests was registered in the period February - April 2021, with a peak of 63 patients in April 2021. The main co-morbidities in patients with Covid 19 were: severe anemia in patients with malignant hemopathies. Anemia at admission in patients with Covid pneumonia is reported in more than 40% of patients. Moderate anemia (Hb <11 g/dL) is considered as an independent risk factor for the severe course of COVID-19 infection and mortality in these patients. The transfusion requirement in these patients was greater than 1.43 RBC (units/patient), 0.81 Plasma units/patient, 0.40 Platelets concentrate units + single donor platelet concentrate units/patient, in accordance with the associated pathology. Conclusion(s): The most requested product was packed red blood cells, the correction of anaemia being an important factor in preventing the severe course of the disease. The platelet requirement was 0.15 units/patient, thrombocytopenia being present in patients with severe evolution of the infection (hospitalized in ICU-COVID). The most requested blood groups were O+ and A+. COVID-19 transfusion data will help plan and prepare for the use of blood resources during the pandemic.Copyright © 2022 Sevigean Ali et al., published by Sciendo.

13.
Clin Hemorheol Microcirc ; 2023 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20235294

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Anemia is common in the old and often observed in critically ill patients. Increased age is associated with higher mortality following a COVID-19 infection, making old patients prone to poor outcomes. We investigated whether anemia at admission to the ICU or the need for blood transfusion was associated with 90-day mortality in older, critically ill COVID-19 patients. METHODS: In this prospective multicenter study, the 90-day mortality of COVID-19 patients≥70 years treated in 138 intensive care units (ICU) was analyzed. Associations between anemia (WHO definition) at admission and discharge from ICU and the use of red blood cell (RBC) transfusions with mortality were assessed. Hemoglobin thresholds of RBC transfusions in old, critically ill COVID-19 patients were recorded. RESULTS: In 493 patients (350 anemic, 143 non-anemic), anemia (WHO definition) at the time of ICU admission was not associated with impaired overall survival. Transfusion and severe anemia (hemoglobin≤10 g/dL) at ICU discharge were independently associated with a higher risk of 90-day mortality. CONCLUSION: The need for red blood cell transfusions and severe anemia at ICU discharge, but not at the timepoint of admission, were independently associated with 90-day mortality in critically-ill old COVID-19 patients.

14.
Indian J Hematol Blood Transfus ; : 1-8, 2022 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20237852

ABSTRACT

During COVID-19 pandemic, many doctors were redirected from various disciplines for care of COVID-19 patients. A survey was conducted among doctors involved, to assess transfusion practices during the pandemic. To assess the knowledge, attitude, and practices of blood transfusion among doctors involved in care of COVID-19 patients. A cross-sectional survey using an online questionnaire (Google form) was used to assess knowledge and need of transfusion, attitude towards modifications in transfusion process, and practices during pandemic. Analysis was done among subgroups based on experience (designation), user type (speciality) and frequency of blood usage in parent department. Of 1900 invitations, 437 responses were received from resident doctors and faculty members across various disciplines. Of these, 354(81%) participants were included in analysis. Mean knowledge score was 6.2, majority 297(83.9%) had adequate knowledge scores (≥ 5 of total 12). Knowledge levels were higher among frequent blood users. Positive attitude towards changes in transfusion process was observed in 72.9% participants with similar scores in subgroups. Practice was assessed in 222(62.7%) participants. Mean practice score was 6.9, wherein 57.7% participants had optimal scores (≥ 7 of total 14). Positive correlation was observed between attitude and practice, unlike knowledge and practice. Although most participants had demonstrated adequate transfusion knowledge levels and positive attitude, transfusion practices during pandemic were affected mainly due to shortage of blood components and modifications in transfusion requisition process due to stringent COVID-19 containment measures. Thus, indicating need for improvement in the basic understanding of the transfusion process. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12288-022-01613-2.

15.
Transfus Med ; 2023 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20240495

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Although no case of COVID-19 transmission through transfusion has been reported, blood transfusion service (BTS) continues to implement pre-donation and post-donation measures to minimise the risk. In year 2022, when local healthcare system was badly impacted by a major outbreak, it opened an opportunity to re-examine the viraemia risk in these asymptomatic donors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Records were retrieved from blood donors who reported COVID-19 after donation and follow-up was also made for recipients who received their blood. Blood samples at donation were tested for SARS-CoV-2 viraemia by single-tube nested real-time RT-PCR assay designed to detect most SARS-CoV-2 variants including the prevailing delta and omicron variants. RESULTS: From 1 January to 15 August 2022, the city with 7.4 M inhabitants recorded 1 187 844 COVID-19 positive cases and 125 936 successful blood donations were received. 781 donors reported to the BTS after donation with 701 being COVID-19 related (including close contact and symptoms respiratory tract infection). 525 COVID-19 were positive at the time of call back or follow-up. Of the 701 donations, they were processed into 1480 components with 1073 discarded upon donors' call back. For remaining 407 components, no recipient was found to have adverse event or COVID-19 positive. 510 samples from the above 525 COVID-19 positive donors were available and all tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 RNA. DISCUSSION: With the negative SARS-CoV-2 RNA in blood donation samples and follow up data in transfusion recipients, the risk of transfusion transmitted COVID-19 appears negligible. However, current measures remains important in securing blood safety with ongoing surveillance of their effectiveness.

16.
Br J Nurs ; 32(11): 522-525, 2023 Jun 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20233550

ABSTRACT

The World Health Organization (2019) has determined that patient safety is a global public health challenge. In UK clinical areas, policies and procedures are in place for the safe prescribing and delivery of blood and blood product transfusions, yet patient safety incidences continue. Undergraduate nurse education and training may provide the underlying knowledge to practitioners, while postgraduate standalone training sessions support skill development. However, over time, without regular experience, competence will diminish. Nursing students may have little exposure to transfusion practice and COVID-19 may have exacerbated this challenge with a reduction in placement availability. The use of simulation to support theory with follow-up and ongoing drop-in training sessions may help to inform practitioners and improve patient safety in the management and delivery of blood and blood product transfusion.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate , Nurses , Humans , Blood Transfusion , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/methods , Patient Safety , Clinical Competence
17.
Clin Infect Dis ; 2023 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2327680

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) use between October-December 2020 was characterized using the National Inpatient Sample database. CCP was administered in 18.0% of COVID-19-associated hospitalizations, and was strongly associated with older age and increased disease severity. There were disparities in the receipt of CCP by race and ethnicity, geography, and insurance.

18.
Blood Substitutes and Oxygen Biotherapeutics ; : 131-148, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2323803

ABSTRACT

Transfusion of erythrocytes (RBC) to treat acute or chronic anemia has significant drawbacks, given the risks of transfusion, volunteer donor requirements, limited supply with increasing demand, especially during a pandemic such as COVID-19, and erythrocytes are often unavailable in emergency situations or where blood is not an option. Significant research has been undertaken for almost 100 years to attempt to replicate the functions of RBCs with oxygen carriers/oxygen therapeutics based on hemoglobin. Oxygen carriers that have been evaluated are hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs). HBOCs utilize hemoglobin (Hb) to transport oxygen around the body. Blood transfusion may be critical therapy in hemorrhagic trauma, various pathologies both acute and chronic, and surgical interventions. It has some important goals: the first and most important is to recover oxygen delivery to organs, additionally, when restoration of circulating blood volume is achieved, maintenance of adequate blood pressure to ensure enough blood flow to deliver the oxygen to the microcirculation and resolving oxygen debt. This chapter will review the history of HBOCs, discuss how HBOCs have been designed and how developed HBOCs differ from each other based on their pharmacology and physiology, highlight all major products to undergo human trials including one extensively studied product approved for human use in two countries (Hemopure), introduce newer products still under development, and finally present translational and clinical trials studying whether or not certain HBOCs may cause coagulation issues. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022.

19.
ASAIO Journal ; 69(Supplement 1):44, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2322466

ABSTRACT

Acquired von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS) contributes to bleeding during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support. Although it is recognized that AVWS rapidly resolves after ECMO decannulation, this approach may often be clinically unsuitable. In such cases, optimal AVWS management during ECMO support is not well established. We report our approach to managing AVWS in a patient on veno-venous (VV) ECMO for 59 days. A 19-year-old male developed hypoxemic respiratory failure from SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. Following intubation, he progressed to VV-ECMO support for refractory hypoxemia and was started on bivalirudin for systemic anticoagulation. Two days later, he developed refractory gastrointestinal and oro-nasopharyngeal bleeding despite blood product transfusions and discontinuing bivalirudin. He was started on pantoprazole along with infusions of octreotide and aminocaproic acid. Upper endoscopy on ECMO day 5 revealed an ulcerative bleeding vessel in the duodenum that was clipped. Recurrent mucosal bleeding precluded resumption of systemic anticoagulation. On ECMO day 23, AVWS was diagnosed based on elevated von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity (207%, normal 55-189%) and antigen (234%, normal 50-210%) levels with abnormally low VWF high-molecular-weight multimers. Factor VIII complex was administered twice over the following week. Between doses, the ECMO circuit was exchanged to empirically mitigate suspected shear-related VWF consumption from the fibrin burden, and a repeat endoscopy controlled additional intestinal bleeding with local hemostatic agents. He received 36 units of red blood cells, 2 units of platelets, 2 units of plasma, and 7 pooled units of cryoprecipitate over 31 days leading into these combined interventions. In the 28 days afterwards, he received 3 units of red blood cells, 3.5 pooled units of cryoprecipitate, and no additional platelets or plasma. Our patient was maintained off systemic anticoagulation for 54 of 59 days of VV-ECMO support without any thrombotic complications occurring. With no subsequent clinical evidence of bleeding, repeat VWF testing was done two months post-decannulation and showed near-normal VWF activity (54%) and normal multimer distribution. Our patient rehabilitated well without any neurologic deficits and on discharge was requiring supplemental oxygen with sleep and strenuous activity. Avoiding systemic anticoagulation, repleting VWF, maintaining circuit integrity, and providing local hemostasis, when possible, may be a safe and effective management strategy of AVWS on ECMO support when decannulation is not a viable option.

20.
Hepatology International ; 17(Supplement 1):S19-S20, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2322379

ABSTRACT

In 1990, the seroprevalence of antibody against hepatitis C virus (anti- HCV) in Taiwan was first documented to be 0.95% in volunteer blood donors, 90% in hemophiliacs, and 81% in parenteral drug abusers. The risk factors for HCV infection in Taiwan include iatrogenic transmission (medical injection, hemodialysis, acupuncture, and blood transfusion), tattooing, and sexual transmission. The long-term risk of hepatic and non-hepatic diseases has been well-documented by REVEL-HCV study. A national program of antiviral therapy for chronic viral hepatitis was launched in Taiwan in 2003. Mortality rates of end-stage liver diseases decreased continuously from 2000-2003 to 2008-2011 in all age and gender groups. When the World Health Assembly adopted the Global Health Sector Strategy on Viral Hepatitis in 2016, National program to eliminate hepatitis C was very carefully evaluated. It became a consensus to reach the WHO's 2030 goals in 2025. Taiwan Hepatitis C Policy Guideline 2018-2025 was approved and published at the beginning of 2019. There are triple focuses of hepatitis C elimination in Taiwan including (1) therapy spearheads prevention, (2) screening supports therapy, and (3) prevention secures outcome. A total of US$1.7 billion will be allocated from 2017 to 2025 for the elimination of HCV. The coverage of HCV screening and treatment has been increasing significantly since 2017. The HCV screening coverage was almost 100% for dialytic patients, 96% for HIV-infected patients, 65% for patients under opioid substitution treatment, 63% for patients in the pre-end-stage renal disease care program, 57% for patients in the early chronic kidney disease care program, 52% for patients in diabetes care program, 39% for prisoners, and 38% for adults aged 45-79 years old in the general population by April 30, 2020. The budget to cover the cost of DAA increased from US$101 million in 2017 to US$219 million in 2019. The number of chronic hepatitis C patients receiving DAA therapy increased from 9,538 in 2017, 19,549 in 2018, to 45,806 in 2019. However, the number of DAA-treated CHC patients reduced to 36,159 in 2020 and 20,559 in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The cure rate based on SVR12 was 96.8% in 2017, 97.4% in 2018, over 98.6% after 2019. It is expected that Taiwan will achieve WHO's HCV elimination goal by 2025.

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