Jump to content

Featured Replies

Posted
comment_12829

I need to determine the unsafe endpoint of a manual tube room temp titre to prevent hemolytic reactions for receipient of ABO incompatible Pooled Plt or ABO incompatible Apheresis plts. I've seen several different titres (1/50, 1/100, 1/200 and 1/256) but I do not want to exclude safe donors. Is anyone performing these at their facility. thx

  • Replies 7
  • Views 4.7k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

comment_12867

We are in the process of implementing this testing. We are only testing group O platelets. We plan to use a dilution of 1:100 againt a and b cells in an IgG gel card. If the reaction is positive, the platelets can only be used for type O recipients. Those platelets that are negative can be issued to any type recipient. We chose the 1:100 dilution based on a cont ed program I attended that stated this is the European standard.

Stephanie

comment_12882

I am interested in the titer approach to incompatible plasma and would be interested in any references you can provide. With platelets being in short supply on a regular basis what do you do if there aren’t any type specific platelets available and all you have is a high titer product.

We have a policy relating to incompatible plasma and a limit that we have placed upon it based upon volume. “No patient shall receive more that 1000 mls of incompatible plasma per 7-day period or approximately 600 mls per 24-hour period unless approved by the pathologist on call.”

comment_12886

We use the 1:50 titer. It has worked well for years. 1 drop plasma to 49 drops of saline. Test 2 drops against 1 drop of A1 or B cells at IS. It is quick and easy.

  • Author
comment_12913
We are in the process of implementing this testing. We are only testing group O platelets. We plan to use a dilution of 1:100 againt a and b cells in an IgG gel card. If the reaction is positive, the platelets can only be used for type O recipients. Those platelets that are negative can be issued to any type recipient. We chose the 1:100 dilution based on a cont ed program I attended that stated this is the European standard.

Stephanie

do you know the european standard? I would like to reference it in my COP. Thanks again for you help. We do mostly manual work so I may adopt a Peg IAT instead of gel-does this make sense?:)

  • Author
comment_12914
I am interested in the titer approach to incompatible plasma and would be interested in any references you can provide. With platelets being in short supply on a regular basis what do you do if there aren’t any type specific platelets available and all you have is a high titer product.

We have a policy relating to incompatible plasma and a limit that we have placed upon it based upon volume. “No patient shall receive more that 1000 mls of incompatible plasma per 7-day period or approximately 600 mls per 24-hour period unless approved by the pathologist on call.â€

We are deveoloping a policy for incompatible plts/we call med director if incompatible plasma is required-we don't have plasma supply problem. We do not titre plts but are now pooling plts using buffy coat poor methods and our pooled plts were a pool of 5 donors plasma(we would plasma reduce apheresis plts) but now the pool is 80% one donor and 20% 3 other donors. Now we are having problems with any incompatible plt issue.:)

  • Author
comment_12915
We use the 1:50 titer. It has worked well for years. 1 drop plasma to 49 drops of saline. Test 2 drops against 1 drop of A1 or B cells at IS. It is quick and easy.

do you have a standard or method(paper) that you reference for this dilution?:)

comment_12970

They have been doing it this way for many years (I have been here for 2). I will check and get back to you.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.