Abstract

Despite declining transfusion rates, overuse of O RhD-negative red blood cells (RBCs) risks the secure supply of this limited resource. A nationwide prospective audit was performed in Finland to understand the clinical use and inventory management of O RhD-negative units. Our aim was to identify areas where policy changes could help alleviate the shortage of O RhD-negative RBCs. The use of every O RhD-negative unit in Finland during a period of 1 month was reviewed. For each issued unit (n= 1105), unit age, urgency of transfusion, hospital and patient demographics, and specific reasons for issuing O RhD-negative units were recorded. Almost half of the O RhD-negative units (n= 529, 47.9%) were issued to non-O RhD-negative patients. Only 22.3% (n= 118) were issued for females under the age of 50. Of the units for ABO-nonidentical transfusion, one-third (32.5%, n= 172) were issued for emergency transfusion, two-thirds (67.5%, n= 357) for non-urgent transfusions. The most common reason for issuing an O RhD-negative unit was inventory management (n= 172, 48.2% of units issued for non-urgent transfusion). Most of these units were issued close to the unit expiry date. This nationwide audit revealed that a significant proportion of O RhD-negative RBCs are used inappropriately. Clinicians should be educated on the appropriate use of O RhD-negative RBCs, and blood banks should develop strategies for inventory management to avoid issuing O RhD-negative units purely to prevent outdating.

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