Improving packed red blood cell storage with a high-viscosity buffered storage solution

Massive transfusion with older packed red blood cells is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. As packed red blood cells age, they undergo biochemical and structural changes known as the storage lesion. We developed a novel solution to increase viscosity in stored packed red blood cells...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgery 2022-03, Vol.171 (3), p.833-842
Hauptverfasser: Pulliam, Kasiemobi E., Joseph, Bernadin, Makley, Amy T., Caldwell, Charles C., Lentsch, Alex B., Goodman, Michael D., Pritts, Timothy A.
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container_end_page 842
container_issue 3
container_start_page 833
container_title Surgery
container_volume 171
creator Pulliam, Kasiemobi E.
Joseph, Bernadin
Makley, Amy T.
Caldwell, Charles C.
Lentsch, Alex B.
Goodman, Michael D.
Pritts, Timothy A.
description Massive transfusion with older packed red blood cells is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. As packed red blood cells age, they undergo biochemical and structural changes known as the storage lesion. We developed a novel solution to increase viscosity in stored packed red blood cells. We hypothesized that packed red blood cell storage in this solution would blunt storage lesion formation and mitigate the inflammatory response after resuscitation. Blood was obtained from 8- to 10-week-old C57BL/6 male donor mice or human volunteers and stored as packed red blood cell units for 14 days for mice or 42 days for humans in either standard AS-3 storage solution or EAS-1587, the novel packed red blood cell storage solution. Packed red blood cells were analyzed for microvesicles, cell-free hemoglobin, phosphatidylserine, band-3 protein, glucose utilization, and osmotic fragility. Additional mice underwent hemorrhage and resuscitation with packed red blood cells stored in either AS-3 or EAS-1587. Serum was analyzed for inflammatory markers. Murine packed red blood cells stored in EAS-1587 demonstrated reductions in microvesicle and cell-free hemoglobin accumulation as well as preserved band-3 expression, increase glucose utilization, reductions in phosphatidylserine expression, and susceptibility to osmotic stress. Serum from mice resuscitated with packed red blood cells stored in EAS-1587 demonstrated reduced proinflammatory cytokines. Human packed red blood cells demonstrated a reduction in microvesicle and cell-free hemoglobin as well as an increase in glucose utilization. Storage of packed red blood cells in a novel storage solution mitigated many aspects of the red blood cell storage lesion as well as the inflammatory response to resuscitation after hemorrhage. This modified storage solution may lead to improvement of packed red blood cell storage and reduce harm after massive transfusion.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.surg.2021.11.020
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As packed red blood cells age, they undergo biochemical and structural changes known as the storage lesion. We developed a novel solution to increase viscosity in stored packed red blood cells. We hypothesized that packed red blood cell storage in this solution would blunt storage lesion formation and mitigate the inflammatory response after resuscitation. Blood was obtained from 8- to 10-week-old C57BL/6 male donor mice or human volunteers and stored as packed red blood cell units for 14 days for mice or 42 days for humans in either standard AS-3 storage solution or EAS-1587, the novel packed red blood cell storage solution. Packed red blood cells were analyzed for microvesicles, cell-free hemoglobin, phosphatidylserine, band-3 protein, glucose utilization, and osmotic fragility. Additional mice underwent hemorrhage and resuscitation with packed red blood cells stored in either AS-3 or EAS-1587. Serum was analyzed for inflammatory markers. Murine packed red blood cells stored in EAS-1587 demonstrated reductions in microvesicle and cell-free hemoglobin accumulation as well as preserved band-3 expression, increase glucose utilization, reductions in phosphatidylserine expression, and susceptibility to osmotic stress. Serum from mice resuscitated with packed red blood cells stored in EAS-1587 demonstrated reduced proinflammatory cytokines. Human packed red blood cells demonstrated a reduction in microvesicle and cell-free hemoglobin as well as an increase in glucose utilization. Storage of packed red blood cells in a novel storage solution mitigated many aspects of the red blood cell storage lesion as well as the inflammatory response to resuscitation after hemorrhage. 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subjects Adenine
Animals
Blood Preservation
Buffers
Citrates
Disease Models, Animal
Erythrocytes
Glucose
Humans
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Organ Preservation Solutions
Phosphates
Shock, Hemorrhagic - therapy
Sodium Chloride
Time Factors
Viscosity
title Improving packed red blood cell storage with a high-viscosity buffered storage solution
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