4.2 Article

Fresh frozen plasma quality: relation to age and gender of blood donors

Journal

VOX SANGUINIS
Volume 102, Issue 2, Pages 116-124

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2011.01518.x

Keywords

blood donation; donor age; donor gender; fresh frozen plasma quality; haemostatic parameters

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Background In view of demographic changes, it is becoming increasingly necessary to make allowance for the fact that older individuals in good health are generally more willing to donate blood and hence they should be allowed to do so irrespective of an upper age limit. In this respect, evidence has to be produced that there is neither an age-related increase in risks to the donor nor any influence on the safety and efficacy of the blood components. It was therefore of interest to examine the quality of therapeutic plasma in relation to a donors age and also a donors gender in view of the preferred use of male donor plasma for reducing the risk of transfusion related acute lung injury. Study Design and Methods Citrate-phosphate-dextrose (CPD) units of whole blood taken in each case from 50 blood donors (30 men and 20 women) of three age groups (cohort 1 = 69-71 years, cohort 2 = 66-68 years and cohort 3 = 50-52 years) were filtered, centrifuged and then separated into the relevant blood components. The plasma samples were assessed for international normalized ratio (INR), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), fibrinogen, factor V (FV), factor VIII (FVIII), antithrombin (AT), protein S and plasminogen. Results While aPTT showed only slight age-related differences of no significance, the INR levels of cohort 1 were significantly higher than those of cohorts 2 and 3. However, in terms of gender, this applied to male donors only. The differences in INR are demonstrated by lower FV levels of male cohort 1 donors, although this is not statistically significant in comparison with the other two age groups and with female donors. Female donors of all cohorts, however, exhibited noticeably lower aPTT levels than male donors. Lower INR and aPTT values in women could be a sign of a lower dilution affected by CPD anticoagulant as compared to male plasma. An increase in FVIII levels was also apparent with increasing age (P < 0 05), particularly in male donor plasma. The fibrinogen levels suggest a slight, though insignificant, agerelated increase and no significant gender-dependent effect. The plasma levels of AT and plasminogen were unremarkable. The plasma of female cohort 3 donors exhibited a protein S concentration that was slightly lower by comparison. Compared with the other two cohorts, cohort 1 plasma levels were similarly above or below the normal range derived from cohort 3 (central 95% range) for all parameters tested.

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