TY - JOUR
T1 - Safety profile of plasma for fractionation donated in the United Kingdom, with respect to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
AU - Thomas, Stephen
AU - Roberts, Barnaby
AU - Domanović, Dragoslav
AU - Kramer, Koen
AU - Klochkov, Denis
AU - Sivasubramaniyam, Sujan
AU - Miloslavich, Dana
AU - Plançon, Jean-Philippe
AU - Rossi, Françoise
AU - Misztela, Dominika
AU - Kirkpatrick, Lauren
AU - Miflin, Gail
AU - Birchall, Janet
AU - McLintock, Lorna
AU - Knight, Richard
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank all participants in the working group who produced the full paper [7]: Peter O'Leary (Executive Director, EBA), Leni von Bonsdorff (Executive Director, IPFA), Benoît Flan (Chair, Biological Safety Working Group, IPFA), Bob Perry (Senior Advisor, IPFA), Gerry Gogarty (Director, Plasma for Medicines, NHSBT), Rachel Meeke (Lead Quality Specialist, NHSBT), Mette Mikkelsen (Governance Lead, NHSBT), Hetty Wood (Secretariat, NHSBT), Marc Turner (Director, SNBTS), Johan Prevot (Steering Group Member, PLUS), Brian O'Mahony (Steering Group Member, PLUS), Frank Willersinn (Steering Group Member, PLUS), Thomas R. Kreil (Vice President Global Pathogen Safety, Takeda; Chair PPTA Global Pathogen Safety Working Group; GPSWG), John More (Director of R&D, BioProducts Laboratory Ltd; PPTA GPSWG), Elisa Moretti (Pathogen Safety Director, Kedrion Sp.A, PPTA GPSWG), Martyn Paddick (Head of Biosafety, BioProducts Laboratory Ltd; PPTA GPSWG) and Peter Richardson (Head of Quality Assurance, Welsh Blood Service). The expert advice of Peter Foster (retired), Gary Mallinson (NHSBT), Michael Jones (SNBTS) and David McIntosh (UK Plasma Action) is also gratefully acknowledged. G.M., L.K., J.B. and L.M. conceived and commissioned the paper; S.T. led the writing group with significant contributions from B.R., D.D., K.K., D.K., S.S., D.M., J-P.P., F.R., D.M. and R.K. All authors reviewed and approved the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 International Society of Blood Transfusion.
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - Plasma-derived medicinal products (PDMPs) are life-saving and life-improving therapies, but the raw material is in short supply: Europe depends on importation from countries including the United States. Plasma from donors resident in the United Kingdom has not been fractionated since 1999 when a precautionary measure was introduced in response to the outbreak of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD). Cases of vCJD have been far fewer than originally predicted in the 1990s. Since the introduction of leucodepletion in 1999, and accounting for the incubation period, more than 40 million UK-derived blood components have been issued with no reports of TT vCJD. In February 2021, the UK Government authorized manufacture of immunoglobulin from UK plasma. Following separate reviews concluding no significant difference in the risk posed, the United States, Australia, Ireland and Hong Kong also lifted their deferrals of blood donors with a history of living in the United Kingdom. Other countries are actively reviewing their position. Demand is rising for PDMPs, and Europe faces a threat of supply shortages. Industry and patient groups are clear that using UK plasma would bring significant immediate benefits to patients and to the resilience of the European supply chain. From this scientific review, we conclude that UK plasma is safe for fractionation and urge blood regulators and operators to take account of this safety profile when considering fractionation of UK plasma, and to revise their guidelines on the deferral of donors who have lived in, or received a transfusion in, the United Kingdom.
AB - Plasma-derived medicinal products (PDMPs) are life-saving and life-improving therapies, but the raw material is in short supply: Europe depends on importation from countries including the United States. Plasma from donors resident in the United Kingdom has not been fractionated since 1999 when a precautionary measure was introduced in response to the outbreak of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD). Cases of vCJD have been far fewer than originally predicted in the 1990s. Since the introduction of leucodepletion in 1999, and accounting for the incubation period, more than 40 million UK-derived blood components have been issued with no reports of TT vCJD. In February 2021, the UK Government authorized manufacture of immunoglobulin from UK plasma. Following separate reviews concluding no significant difference in the risk posed, the United States, Australia, Ireland and Hong Kong also lifted their deferrals of blood donors with a history of living in the United Kingdom. Other countries are actively reviewing their position. Demand is rising for PDMPs, and Europe faces a threat of supply shortages. Industry and patient groups are clear that using UK plasma would bring significant immediate benefits to patients and to the resilience of the European supply chain. From this scientific review, we conclude that UK plasma is safe for fractionation and urge blood regulators and operators to take account of this safety profile when considering fractionation of UK plasma, and to revise their guidelines on the deferral of donors who have lived in, or received a transfusion in, the United Kingdom.
KW - blood safety
KW - plasma fractionation
KW - prions
KW - vCJD
U2 - 10.1111/vox.13416
DO - 10.1111/vox.13416
M3 - Review article
C2 - 36880992
SN - 0042-9007
VL - 118
SP - 345
EP - 353
JO - Vox Sanguinis
JF - Vox Sanguinis
IS - 5
ER -