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Transfusion
Related Acute Lung Injury
http://www.fda.gov/cber/ltr/trali101901.htm
Department of Health and Human Services
Public Health Service
Food and Drug Administration
1401 Rockville Pike
Rockville, MD 20852-1448
October 19, 2001
Dear Colleague:
This is to alert you to the possibility that patients who
receive blood products, particularly plasma-containing
products, may be at risk for Transfusion Related Acute Lung
Injury (TRALI), a serious pulmonary syndrome that can lead to
death if not recognized and treated appropriately. Even small
amounts of plasma in packed red blood cells may induce TRALI.
Recognition of symptoms and immediate treatment are
imperative.
Reports
The first TRALI fatality was reported to the Center for
Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) in 1992. Since then,
CBER has received more than 45 fatality reports of TRALI. As
of FY2000 this represented 13 percent of all transfusion
fatalities. TRALI is thought to be the third leading cause of
transfusion related death. The majority of deaths were
associated with fresh frozen plasma transfusions; fewer were
caused by packed red blood cell transfusions and platelet
transfusions. In most cases, follow-up donor antibody screens
implicated donors who were multiparous females and were
positive for anti-HLA or anti-granulocyte antibodies.
Non-fatal TRALI events reported by licensed blood
establishments through Med Watch or as Biological Product
Deviation reports are also on the increase. There have been 26
such reports since 1999. This finding may be attributable to
better recognition and reporting of events. Because of
misdiagnosis and/or underreporting, the full scope of TRALI is
not known.
Description
and Cause of Problem
TRALI is a well-characterized clinical constellation of
symptoms including dyspnea, hypotension, and fever. The
radiological picture is of bilateral pulmonary infiltrates
without evidence of cardiac compromise or fluid overload.
Symptoms typically begin 1-2 hours after transfusion and are
fully manifest within 1-6 hours. Products typically implicated
in TRALI are whole blood, packed red blood cells, fresh frozen
plasma, cryoprecipitate, platelet concentrates, apheresis
platelets, and rarely IGIV1. The etiology of TRALI
may be attributable to the presence of anti-HLA and/ or anti-granulocyte
antibodies in the plasma of multiparous females or donors who
have received previous transfusions. TRALI recipients have no
specific demographics such as age, gender, or previous
transfusion history. Although TRALI does not always occur
through transfusions from donors with anti-HLA or anti-granulocyte
antibodies, one or both of these antibody types have been
found in 89% of TRALI cases.2
1 Rizk A, Gorson K,
Kenny L, and Weinstein R: Transfusion-related acute lung
injury after the infusion of IVIG. Transfusion 2001;
41:264-268.
2 Popovsky,MA,
Chaplin, HC, and Moore, SB. Transfusion-related lung injury: a
neglected serious complication of hemotherapy. Transfusion
1992; 32:589-592.
Diagnosis
and Treatment
It appears that unlike allergic or anaphylactic
immune-mediated transfusion reactions, antibodies implicated
in TRALI are usually of donor origin. Once transferred to the
recipient, these antibodies may cause complement activation
resulting in neutrophilic influx into the lungs and damage to
the pulmonary microvasculature. The clinical result may be
subtle or significant. In either case, there is typically a
marked hypoxemia, hypotension, fever, and severe bilateral
pulmonary edema. Respiratory support should be as intensive as
dictated by the clinical picture. Diuretics play no role in
TRALI as the underlying pathology involves microvascular
injury, rather than fluid overload.
Recommendations
- Be alert that any respiratory distress occurring
during or following blood or blood component(s)
transfusion could potentially be TRALI. Discontinue the
transfusion immediately. Begin oxygen and supportive
therapy.
- Notify the Blood Center that supplied the blood
component and return remaining product to be tested for
anti-HLA and/or anti-granulocyte antibodies in the donor.
- 1. Fatalities from TRALI should be reported to
CBER in accordance with 21CFR 606.170(b). FDA encourages
voluntary reporting of TRALI as a serious adverse reaction
to transfusions. Reports can be filed via MedWatch by
phone at 1-800-FDA-1088, by fax at 1-800-FDA-0178, by US
mail at MedWatch, HF-2, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD
20852, or by email at http://www.fda.gov/medwatch.
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