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  4. In vitro-transfusional model for red-blood-cell study: the advantage of lowering hematocrit
 
research article

In vitro-transfusional model for red-blood-cell study: the advantage of lowering hematocrit

Langst, Emmanuel
•
Crettaz, David
•
Delobel, Julien
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July 1, 2023
Blood Transfusion

Background - Thequalityof red blood cells (RBCs) stored in red cell concentrates (RCCs) is influenced by processing, storage and donor characteristics, and can have a clinical impact on transfused patients. To evaluate RBC properties and their potential impact in a transfusion setting, a simple in vitro -transfusional model has been developed. Materials and methods - Transfusion was simulated by mixing a washed RBC pool from two male -derived RCCs stored at 4 degrees C with a pool of 15 male -derived fresh frozen plasma (FFP) units, representing the recipient, at a hematocrit (HCT) of 30% ("control" setting) or 5% (alternative model). The mixtures were incubated at 37 degrees C, 5% of CO 2 up to 48 h. Different metabolites, hemolysis and microvesicles (MVs) were quantified at several incubation times and RBC-morphology changes and deformability after incubation. For each model, biological triplicates have been investigated with RCCs at storage days 2 and 43. Results - The 5%-HCT model restored the 2,3-DPG level and maintained the ATP level. Furthermore, glucose consumption and corresponding lactate production were increased in the 5%- vs the 30%-HCT condition. Lower hemolysis was observed with 5%-HCT, but only at day 2. However, morphological analysis by digital holographic microscopy (DHM) revealed a decreased fraction of discocytes at 5% rather than at 30% of HCT at storage day 2 but at day 43, the trend was inverted. Concordantly, RBCs incubated at 5% of HCT were more deformable than at 30% at day 43 (p<0.0001). Discussion - Higher metabolic activity of RBCs in the 5%-HCT condition was promoted by a higher glucose availability and limited cell -waste accumulation. The conditions of the new proposed model thus enabled rejuvenation of RBCs and maintained them in a physiological -close state in contrast to the 30%-HCT model. It may be used as a first approach to evaluate e.g. , the impact of donor and recipient characteristics on RBC properties.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.2450/2022.0086-22
Web of Science ID

WOS:001221378700012

Author(s)
Langst, Emmanuel
Crettaz, David
Delobel, Julien
Renella, Raffaele
Bardyn, Manon Sandra  
Turcatti, Gerardo  
Tissot, Jean-Daniel
Prudent, Michel
Date Issued

2023-07-01

Publisher

Simtipro Srl

Published in
Blood Transfusion
Volume

21

Issue

4

Start page

277

End page

288

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

•

Red Cell Concentrates

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Red Blood Cells

•

Transfusion

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In Vitro Model

•

Blood Storage

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PTCB  
FunderGrant Number

SRTS VD Foundation

Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/208591
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