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Establishment of the first International Repository for Transfusion-Relevant Bacteria Reference Strains: ISBT Working Party Transfusion-Transmitted Infectious Diseases (WP-TTID), Subgroup on Bacteria

Authors :
Ineke G.H. Rood
Jay S. Epstein
Melanie Stormer
S. Wendel
Carl P. McDonald
H Carrero
Shawn D. Keil
Thomas Montag
M McKee
Cheuk-Kwong Lee
Christian Schneider
J. Brachert
Erica M. Wood
Christian Gabriel
Sandra Ramirez-Arcos
Thomas Müller
S. Marschner
Piotr Radziwon
Henk W. Reesink
Jan H. Marcelis
Erhard Seifried
Annika Pettersson
Michael Schmidt
Siobhan McGuane
Dana V. Devine
C Gelber
T Muthivhi
Roslyn Yomtovian
Ángel Arroyo
D G Heath
U. Sicker
Raymond P. Goodrich
Julieta Rojo
K. M. O. Hanschmann
Michael R. Jacobs
Dirk de Korte
B. Lambrecht
Source :
Vox Sanguinis. 102:22-31
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

Background Bacterial contamination of platelet concentrates (PCs) still remains a significant problem in transfusion with potential important clinical consequences, including death. The International Society of Blood Transfusion Working Party on Transfusion-Transmitted Infectious Diseases, Subgroup on Bacteria, organised an international study on Transfusion-Relevant Bacteria References to be used as a tool for development, validation and comparison of both bacterial screening and pathogen reduction methods. Material and Methods Four Bacteria References (Staphylococcus epidermidis PEI-B-06, Streptococcus pyogenes PEI-B-20, Klebsiella pneumoniae PEI-B-08 and Escherichia coli PEI-B-19) were selected regarding their ability to proliferate to high counts in PCs and distributed anonymised to 14 laboratories in 10 countries for identification, enumeration and bacterial proliferation in PCs after low spiking (0·3 and 0·03 CFU/ml), to simulate contamination occurring during blood donation. Results Bacteria References were correctly identified in 98% of all 52 identifications. S. pyogenes and E. coli grew in PCs in 11 out of 12 laboratories, and K. pneumoniae and S. epidermidis replicated in all participating laboratories. The results of bacterial counts were very consistent between laboratories: the 95% confidence intervals were for S. epidermidis: 1·19–1·32 × 107 CFU/ml, S. pyogenes: 0·58–0·69 × 107 CFU/ml, K. pneumoniae: 18·71–20·26 × 107 CFU/ml and E. coli: 1·78–2·10 × 107 CFU/ml. Conclusion The study was undertaken as a proof of principle with the aim to demonstrate (i) the quality, stability and suitability of the bacterial strains for low-titre spiking of blood components, (ii) the property of donor-independent proliferation in PCs, and (iii) their suitability for worldwide shipping of deep frozen, blinded pathogenic bacteria. These aims were successfully fulfilled. The WHO Expert Committee Biological Standardisation has approved the adoption of these four bacteria strains as the first Repository for Transfusion-Relevant Bacteria Reference Strains and, additionally, endorsed as a project the addition of six further bacteria strain preparations suitable for control of platelet contamination as the next step of enlargement of the repository.

Details

ISSN :
00429007
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vox Sanguinis
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........81dc1ca98bc8b935768e02cbb029714b