Abstract Introduction/Objective Blood transfusion is becoming safer by continuous improvement of donor screening, patient identification, blood management, and infectious disease screening. This study was conducted to examine the rate and characteristics of transfusion reactions in the setting of universal leukoreduction of cellular products as well as pathogen reduction and/or irradiation of apheresis platelets. Methods/Case Report Data from the blood bank database for a 5-year period from 1/1/2019 to 12/31/2023 was collected. Transfusion reaction data as reported to National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) was analyzed. Results (if a Case Study enter NA) A total of 134,552 transfusions and 491 transfusion reactions were reported over the study period, resulting in the overall transfusion reaction rate of 0.36%. Allergic reaction was the most common reaction (38%), followed by febrile non-hemolytic transfusion reaction (FNHTR, 30%), delayed serologic transfusion reaction (DSTR, 14%), transfusion-associated circulatory overload (TACO, 10%), and transfusion-associated dyspnea (TAD, 4%). Platelets had the highest rate of transfusion reaction at 0.61% (n=167 of 27,180), red blood cells (RBC) at 0.35% (n=289 of 82,963), plasma at 0.13% (n=24 of 19,114), and cryoprecipitate at 0.06% (n=3 of 5295). The most common reaction associated with platelet transfusion was allergic reaction (64%, n=107), while FNHTR was the most common reaction associated with RBC transfusion (37%, n=106). By severity, 9 (2%) reactions were life-threatening, 21 (4%) were severe, 374 (75%) were non-severe, and 87 (18%) were not determined. Of life-threatening reactions, allergic reactions were the most common (5 of 9), while TACO was the most common severe reaction (9 of 21). Platelets were the most commonly implicated component in life- threatening reactions (4 allergic and 2 TACO), and RBCs were more commonly implicated in severe reactions. Conclusion Platelet transfusions were associated with a higher rate of transfusion reactions and life-threatening allergic reactions compared to other blood components.