Plasmavigilance-Adverse events among US Source plasma donors

Transfusion. 2021 Oct;61(10):2941-2957. doi: 10.1111/trf.16612. Epub 2021 Aug 14.

Abstract

Background: Source plasma (SP) is the primary starting material for 87% of plasma-derived medicinal products globally. Plasmavigilance is a program designed to collect, analyze, and monitor donor adverse events (AEs) across the SP collection industry. Donor retention depends on donors having a safe and satisfactory experience. This study analyzes AE rates and SP donor characteristics that may be predictors of an AE.

Study design and methods: Donation data for 1.1 million donors making 12,183,182 SP donations over a 4-month period were analyzed. This represented approximately 72% of the donations collected by the U.S. plasma industry. The Standard for Recording Donor Adverse Events was used for AE definitions and classifications.

Results: The overall AE rate was 15.85/104 donations. The two AEs with the highest rates were Hypotensive and Phlebotomy events (8.32 and 5.91/104 donations, respectively). Females had higher overall AE rates than males (25.76 vs. 9.85/104 donations), and first-time donors had higher overall AE rates than repeat donors (136.66 vs. 12.37/104 donations). Weight, body mass index, age, and pre-donation estimated blood volume also were predictors of AE.

Discussion: SP donors have low AE rates with 90% being events classified as Hypotensive or Phlebotomy. Special attention and mitigation strategies should be directed to donors who are young, lightweight (between 100 and 124 pounds), female, or first-time donors to further reduce the incidence of AE, continue to ensure the donor has a safe experience, and facilitate donor retention.

Keywords: adverse events; donation frequency; plasmavigilance; source plasma.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Age Factors
  • Blood Donors*
  • Blood Specimen Collection / adverse effects*
  • Blood Volume
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hypotension / etiology
  • Male
  • Phlebotomy / adverse effects
  • Plasma* / chemistry
  • Risk Factors
  • Sex Factors
  • United States