Retrospective Study on the Quality Monitoring Procedure of Blood Components in Newly Established Manufacturing Facility at the Department of Transfusion Medicine, University Hospital, General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University
Abstract
Transfusion service must adhere to the strict quality assurance program to ensure minimal
to zero risk to the recipient and optimal therapeutic efficacy. Study is planned to assess
a selected internal quality monitoring parameters of blood components produced at
University Hospital, Kotelawala Defence University . The samples from all components
collected and processed from March 2022 to April 2023 were tested and analyzed for
Transfusion Transmitted Infection (TTI) markers. According to international standards
four units of each component were selected by simple random sampling for internal
quality parameters. The samples were obtained from each unit according to standard
procedure and tested for specific quality parameters. Number of discard units was
calculated according to the component type. 1477 Red Cell Concentrates (RCC), 1291
fresh frozen plasma and 1036 platelet concentrates have been produced. Thirteen (0.88%)
unit samples were TTI screening reactive. Mean packed red cell volume was 291 ml
and haemoglobin per unit was 65 g/unit. Mean haematocrit was 68% and pH was 6.9.
Mean volume and count in platelet concentrates were 69 ml and 74×109
/unit respectively.
White cell contamination was 0.02×109
/unit. Swirling was present in all units. Produced
components met ≥ 75% of minimum standards according to the international guidelines.
27.9% of RCC supply deficit was detected. Total RCC discard was 1.28%. Implementation
of standard operating procedures and validation of the instruments and techniques have
been successful according to the findings. The study ensures the quality and safety of
blood components as a therapeutic product.
Collections
- Medicine [25]