Associated criteria used in investigating suspected septic transfusion reactions: A scoping review

Vox Sang. 2023 Dec;118(12):1029-1037. doi: 10.1111/vox.13521. Epub 2023 Sep 11.

Abstract

Background and objectives: Septic transfusion reactions (STRs) occur as a result of bacterial contamination of blood or blood products, resulting in sepsis. This scoping review aimed to identify, explore and map the available literature on the STR criteria triggering the investigation of STR.

Materials and methods: Four electronic databases (MEDLINE, Web of Science, Science Direct, Embase) were searched to retrieve scientific literature reporting such criteria, published from 1 January 2000 to 5 May 2022. Grey literature was also searched from open web sources.

Results: Of 1052 references identified, 43 (21 peer-reviewed and 22 grey literature) met the eligibility criteria for inclusion and data extraction after full article screening. Of them, most (27/43, 62.79%) were found to report a single set of criteria, and only two reported four or more sets of criteria. The analysis of 66 sets of criteria collected from the selected references revealed 57 different sets. A few sets of criteria used only one sign and symptom (s/s) (12.12%, n = 8), whereas 16 sets used 7-15 s/s (n = 16/66; 24.24%). Of the total 319 occurrences of s/s associated with the 66 sets of criteria, post-transfusion hyperthermia, body temperature increase and hypotension were the most common s/s categories. Of all the literature available, only one study tested the diagnostic accuracy of the STR criteria.

Conclusion: This scoping review revealed a substantial variation in criteria used to identify suspected STR. Consequently, conducting further studies to enhance the diagnostic accuracy of these criteria, which trigger STR investigations, is imperative for advancing clinical practice.

Keywords: blood safety; criteria; risk factors; septic transfusion reactions; transfusion medicine.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Bacteria
  • Blood Transfusion
  • Humans
  • Hypotension*
  • Sepsis* / diagnosis
  • Sepsis* / etiology
  • Transfusion Reaction* / diagnosis
  • Transfusion Reaction* / etiology