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Keeping Blood Transfusions Safe

The FDA ensures the safety of the US blood supply through five overlapping layers of protection: 1) Donor screening includes questioning donors about risks and deferring high risk donors, such as those with a history of IV drug use or time spent in countries with mad cow disease. 2) After donation, each blood unit undergoes testing for diseases like hepatitis B & C, HIV, HTLV, and syphilis. 3) Blood establishments must maintain lists of deferred donors to prevent collecting blood from unsafe donors. 4) Donated blood is quarantined until testing shows it is free of infectious agents. 5) Blood centers must investigate problems, correct deficiencies, and notify the FDA of

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views1 page

Keeping Blood Transfusions Safe

The FDA ensures the safety of the US blood supply through five overlapping layers of protection: 1) Donor screening includes questioning donors about risks and deferring high risk donors, such as those with a history of IV drug use or time spent in countries with mad cow disease. 2) After donation, each blood unit undergoes testing for diseases like hepatitis B & C, HIV, HTLV, and syphilis. 3) Blood establishments must maintain lists of deferred donors to prevent collecting blood from unsafe donors. 4) Donated blood is quarantined until testing shows it is free of infectious agents. 5) Blood centers must investigate problems, correct deficiencies, and notify the FDA of

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Keeping Blood Transfusions Safe:

FDAs Multi-layered Protections for


Donated Blood

Testing Blood
Keeping the United States blood
supply the worlds safest is the
ultimate responsibility of the
nations more than 3,000 blood
establishments, which collect and
process 14 million units of whole
blood donated by volunteers each
year. The Food and Drug Administration, however, has the vital
role of ensuring that the 3.5
million patients who receive a
blood transfusion in a year are
protected by five layers of overlapping safeguards. This FDA
blood-safety system includes the
following measures:
Donor screening: Donors are
informed about potential risks
and are required to answer
questions about factors that may
have a bearing on the safety of
their blood. For example, donors
with a history of intravenous drug
abuse are routinely deferred. Since
November 1999, the FDA has
requested the blood industry to
defer potential donors who had
lived in European countries with

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES


FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Office of Public Affairs
5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857

The FDA reviews and approves all


assay test kits used to detect infectious
and transmissible diseases in donated
blood. Each unit must be tested for:
Hepatitis B and C viruses (HBV and
HCV), which cause inflammation of
the liver. The three tests used identify
current and previous infection with
HBV and HCV; detect a person who
has recovered from a hepatitis B
infection but continues to be a carrier
for HBV; and identify carriers of even
symptomless HCV.
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV 1 and 2), which cause immunodeficiency disease, or AIDS. One test
detects antibodies to proteins of both
types of HIV virus, and another detects
one of the viral proteins of the HIV-1
virus.
Human T-Lymphotropic Virus,
Types I and II, which can cause
infections that can lead to leukemia or a
variety of neurologic diseases.
Syphilis. The test detects ongoing and
previous infections with the bacterium
that causes syphilis.
In addition, the FDA has licensed the
first nucleic acid test systems for
screening donors of whole blood and
blood components, including fresh
plasma, red cells and platelets. The
semi-automated, highly sensitive
systems can directly and rapidly
recognize the genetic material of HCV
and HIV, and thereby detect the
infections before the appearance of
their symptoms.

reported or suspected cases of


BSE, the mad cow disease, and
who might be carriers of the BSE
agent.
Blood testing: After donation,
each unit of donated blood undergoes a series of tests for infectious
diseases.
Donor lists: Blood establishments must keep current a list of
deferred donors and use it to make
sure that they do not collect blood
from anyone on the list.
Quarantine: Donated blood
must be quarantined until it is
tested and shown to be free of
infectious agents.
Problems and deficiencies:
Blood centers must investigate
manufacturing problems, correct
all deficiencies, and notify the
FDA when product deviations
occur in distributed products.
If any one of these safeguards is
breached, the blood product is
considered unsuitable for transfusion and is subject to recall.
For more information, call 301827-2000 or visit www.fda.gov/
cber/blood.htm.

Publication No. FS 02-1


(FDA Web site: www.fda.gov)
February 2002

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