Objective: Transfusion associated sepsis is a serious risk after platelet transfusion. Although platelet culture can be performed to avoid such risk, culture results are often available after transfusion due to the 4-hour shelf-life after pooling. To decrease such risk, we implemented a needleless closed system device to culture for contamination before pooling and release for transfusion.
Methods: We customized a needleless device to permit sterile sampling of whole blood platelets without retrograde or cross-contamination. Then aliquots of platelets were injected into culture media for detection of aerobic organisms and cultured for 24 hours but released for transfusion after 12 hours of negative culture.
Results: In a period of two years, we used this device in 5,741 whole blood derived pooled platelets and only 24 units tested positive (0.4%) but none of initial positive was later confirmed. There were 11 Staphylococcus and 9 Bacillus species identified. All but one of the positive units were discarded; there was no clinical impact in the patient who received the positive unit.
Conclusion: This device allows for sampling of whole blood derived platelets before pooling, warranting a transfusion of a culture negative unit after 12 hours of negative culture, consequently reducing transfusion of bacterially contaminated whole blood derived pooled platelets.
Keywords: Bacterial Culture; Platelet; Pooled plasma; Sampling Device.
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