Relevance of haemoglobin monitoring in apheresis plasma donors: A retrospective cohort study in Québec, Canada

Author:

Lewin Antoine1ORCID,Germain Marc12,Renaud Christian1,Robitaille Nancy3,Latour Catherine3

Affiliation:

1. Medical Affairs and Innovation Héma‐Québec Montréal Québec Canada

2. Medical Affairs and Innovation Héma‐Québec Québec Québec Canada

3. Transfusion Medicine Héma‐Québec Montréal Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesSystematically measuring pre‐donation haemoglobin (Hb) levels might be overly cautious for apheresis plasma donation, since plasmapheresis entails a small loss of red blood cells. We explored the association between the frequency of apheresis plasma donation and capillary blood Hb levels.Materials and MethodsThis retrospective cohort study included donors who gave apheresis plasma at least twice between 24 October 2020 and 23 October 2022 in Québec, Canada. Results were stratified by sex and analysed with linear repeated‐measure mixed models with random intercepts.ResultsIn total, 9535 men (mean age = 46.7 years) and 9409 women (mean age = 41.1 years) made ≥2, but no more than 16 apheresis plasma donations. Over an average of 9.2 months of observation, men maintained Hb levels well above the Hb deferral threshold, and their Hb levels decreased by only 0.17 g/dL between the 1st and 15th donation return (p < 0.0001). Over an average of 9.0 months of observation, women also maintained adequate Hb levels, and their Hb levels decreased by 0.08 g/dL between the 1st and 15th donation return.ConclusionThe frequency of apheresis plasma donation was not associated with clinically meaningful changes in Hb levels, neither in men nor in women. This evidence questions the relevance of systematically monitoring Hb for apheresis plasma donation, at least for donation frequencies of ≤7–8 times per year. However, an adverse impact of plasmapheresis on Hb levels cannot be ruled out for individuals donating more frequently or for longer than ~9 months.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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