Abstract

Recent insights from models of transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), and from clinical reports, reveal that host factors are important in TRALI pathogenesis. Predisposing factors with lung neutrophil-priming capacity, such as sepsis and mechanical ventilation, increase susceptibility for a TRALI reaction, and can aggravate the course of disease. These findings may explain the higher incidence of TRALI in the critically ill compared with general hospital populations. The emerging importance of host factors may have implications for TRALI management. Suspected TRALI cases in which another acute lung injury risk factor is present (termed ‘possible TRALI’ in the consensus definition) should be reported to the blood bank, including patients suffering from an underlying condition. In reporting of TRALI cases, use of the international TRALI consensus definition should be used, rather then national TRALI scoring systems, to ensure a uniform approach, which may decrease variance in estimations of incidence. In terms of treatment of TRALI patients, there is a rationale to apply therapeutic strategies, which have proven to be beneficial in acute lung injury.

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