Скачать книгу

Report, Department of Health and Human Services. Conducted under contract (HHSP23320110008TC) with the American Association of Blood Banks, and using OMB Number 0990–0313. Bethesda, MD: AABB. Available from: https://www.aabb.org/research/hemovigilance/bloodsurvey/Documents/2013‐AABB‐Blood‐Survey‐Report.pdf. Published December 18, 2015.

      4 4. Custer B, Schlumpf K, Simon TL, et al. Demographics of successful, unsuccessful and deferral visits at six blood centers over a four‐year period. Transfusion 2012; 52(4):712–721.

      5 5. Riley W, Schwei M, McCullough J. The United States’ potential blood donor pool: estimating the prevalence of donor exclusion factors on the pool of potential donors. Transfusion 2007; 47:1180–1188.

      6 6. Grossman BJ, Springer KM, Zuck TF. Blood donor deferral registries: highlights of a conference. Transfusion 1992; 32:868–872.

      7 7. Simon TL, Rhyne RL, Wayne SJ, Garry PJ. Characteristics of elderly blood donors. Transfusion 1991; 31:693–697.

      8 8. Pindyck J, Avorn J, Kuriyan M, et al. Blood donation by the elderly—clinical and policy considerations. JAMA 1987; 257:1186–1188.

      9 9. Garry PJ, VanderJagt DJ, Wayne SJ, et al. A prospective study of blood donations in healthy elderly persons. Transfusion 1991; 31:686–692.

      10 10. Goldman M, Uzicanin S, Osmond L, et al. A large national study of ferritin testing in Canadian blood donor. Transfusion 2017; 57:564–570.

      11 11. Mast AE, Bialkowski W, Bryant BJ, et al. A randomized, blinded, placebo‐controlled trial of education and iron supplementation for mitigation of iron deficiency in regular blood donors. Transfusion 2016; 56:1588–1597.

      12 12. Schmidt PJ. Blood donation by the healthy elderly. Transfusion 1991; 31:681–683.

      13 13. Mast AE. Putting donor health first in strategies to mitigate donor iron deficiency. Transfusion 2017; 57(3):495–498.

      14 14. Sanchez AM, Schreiber GB, Glynn SA, et al. Blood‐donor perceptions of health history screening with a computer‐assisted self‐administered interview. Transfusion 2003; 43:165–167.

      15 15. Steele WR, Hewitt EH, Kaldun AM, et al. Donors deferred for self‐reported Chagas disease history: does it reduce risk? Transfusion 2014; 54(8):2092–2097.

      16 16. O’Brien SF, Chiavetta JA, Goldman M, et al. Predictive ability of sequential surveys in determining donor loss from increasingly stringent variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease deferral policies. Transfusion 2006; 46:461–468.

      17 17. O’Brien SF, Fan W, Yi QL, et al. Variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease deferral in Canada: impact of stop dates. Blood Transfus 2018; 16:26–31.

      18 18. Murphy EL, Connor JD, McEvoy P, et al. Estimating blood donor loss due to the variant CJD travel deferral. Transfusion 2004; 44:645–650.

      19 19. Spencer B, Steele W, Custer B, et al. Risk for malaria in United States donors deferred for travel to malaria‐endemic areas. Transfusion 2009; 49:2335–2345.

      20 20. US Food and Drug Administration. Blood Products Advisory Committee Meeting FDA White Oak Campus, Silver Spring, MD, March 20‐21, 2019 [Internet]. Available at:https://www.fda.gov/media/120953/download

      21 21. Custer B, Sheon N, Siedle‐Khan B, et al. Blood donor deferral for men who have sex with men: the Blood Donation Rules Opinion Study (Blood DROPS). Transfusion 2015; 55(12):2826–2834.

      22 22. Davison KL, Gregoire Y, Germain M, et al. Changing the deferral for men who have sex with men—an improved model to estimate HIV residual risk. Vox Sang 2019; 114(7):666–674.

      23 23. O’Brien SF, Grégoire Y, Pillonel J, et al. HIV residual risk in Canada under a three‐month deferral for men who have sex with men. Vox Sang 2020; 115(2):133–139.

      24 24. Wang B, Higgins MJ, Kleinman S, et al. Comparison of demographic and donation profiles and transfusion‐transmissible disease markers and risk rates in previously transfused and nontransfused blood donors. Transfusion 2004; 44:1243–1251.

      25 25. Busch MP, Young MJ, Samson SJ, et al. Risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission by blood transfusions before the implementation of HIV‐1 antibody screening. Transfusion 1991; 31:4–11.

      26 26. Lefrere JJ, Elghouzzi MH, Salpetrier J, et al. Interviews of individuals diagnosed as anti‐human immunodeficiency virus‐positive through the screening of blood donations in the Paris area from 1991 to 1994: reflections on the selection of blood donors. Transfusion 1996; 36:124–127.

      27 27. Doll LS, Petersen LR, White CR. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1‐infected blood donors: behavioral characteristics and reasons for donation. Transfusion 1991; 31:704–709.

      28 28. McDonnell SM, Grindon AJ, Preston BL, et al. A survey of phlebotomy among persons with hemochromatosis. Transfusion 1999; 39:651–656.

      29 29. Hoad V, Bentley P, Bell B, et al. The infectious disease blood safety risk of Australian hemochromatosis donations. Transfusion 2016; 56:2934–2940.

      30 30. Leitman SF, Browning JN, Yau YY, et al. Hemochromatosis subjects as allogeneic blood donors: a prospective study. Transfusion 2003; 43:1538–1544.

      31 31. West KA, Eder AF. Accepting hereditary hemochromatosis blood donors: ask not why, ask why not. Transfusion 2016; 56:2907–2909.

      32 32. Lewis SM, Emmanuel J. Validity of the haemoglobin colour scale in blood donor screening. Vox Sang 2001; 80:28–33.

      33 33. De Clippel D, Van Heddegem L, Vandewalle G, et al. Hemoglobin screening in blood donors: a prospective study assessing the value of an invasive and a noninvasive point‐of‐care device for donor safety. Transfusion 2017; 57(4):938–945.

      34 34. Wood EM, Kim DM, Miller JP. Accuracy of predonation Hct sampling affects donor safety, eligibility, and deferral rates. Transfusion 2001; 41:353–359.

      35 35. Lau P, Hansen M, Sererat M. Influence of climate on donor deferrals. Transfusion 1989; 28:559–562.

      36 36. Cable RG, Glynn SA, Kiss JE, et al. Iron deficiency in blood donors: analysis of enrollment data from the REDS‐II donor iron status evaluation (RISE) study. Transfusion 2011; 51:511–522.

      37 37. Booth AO, Lim K, Capper H, et al. Iron status and dietary iron intake of female blood donors. Transfusion 2014; 54(3):770–774.

      38 38. Sayers M, Centilli J. Concerning iron balance in blood donors. Transfusion 2014; 54(11):3010–3013.

      39 39. Gorlin J. Iron man pentathlon or “we have met the enemy and they is us!” Transfusion 2014; 54(3):747–749.

      40 40. Armitage J. Giving the donor his (or her) due. Transfusion 2014; 54(3):750–752.

      41 41. Vassallo RR, Bravo MD, Kamel H. Ferritin testing to characterize and address iron deficiency in young donors. Transfusion 2018; 58:2861–2867.

      42 42. Kiss JE, Vassallo RR. How do we manage iron deficiency after blood donation? Br J Haematol 2018; 181:590–603.

      43 43. Verdon F, Burnand B, Stubi CL, et al. Iron supplementation for unexplained fatigue in non‐anemic women: double blind randomized placebo controlled trial. BMJ 2003; 326:1124–1126.

      44 44. Krayenbuehl PA, Battegay E, Breymann C, et al. Intravenous iron for the treatment of fatigue in nonanemic, premenopausal women with low serum ferritin concentration. Blood 2011; 118:3222–3227.

      45 45. Bialkowski W, Bryant BJ, Schlumpf KS, et al. The strategies to reduce iron deficiency in blood donors randomized trial: design, enrolment and early retention. Vox Sang 2015; 108:178–185.

      46 46. United States Industry Consensus Standard for the Uniform Labeling of Blood and Blood Components Using ISBT 128. Version 3.0.0, March 2013, Tracking Number ICCBBA IG‐002. San Bernardino, CA: ICCBBA.

      47 47. Eder AF, Kennedy JM, Dy BA, et al. Limiting and detecting bacterial contamination of apheresis

Скачать книгу