Measurement of lead, mercury, and cadmium in blood donors in Canada.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 HEMATOLOGY
Transfusion Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-16 DOI:10.1111/trf.17872
Narges Hadjesfandiari, Katherine Serrano, Tomas Richardson-Sanchez, Vilte E Barakauskas, Qi-Long Yi, Michael Murphy, Dana V Devine
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Abstract

Background: Fetal and neonatal exposure to lead is associated with irreversible adverse effects on neural development. There is no reliable threshold for lead effect, so limiting exposure is recommended. A significant correlation has been reported between post-transfusion blood lead level (BLL) in infants and lead levels in transfused RBC units. We measured levels of lead, mercury, and cadmium, in Canadian donor blood to investigate if concerning levels for neonatal transfusion exist.

Study design and methods: Whole blood samples from blood donors (n = 2529) were shipped cold within 7 days of donation. All permanent blood donation clinics across Canada were sampled. Twelve of these permanent clinics and 8 mobile clinics with a greater potential for having higher lead or mercury levels were oversampled. Heavy metals were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.

Results: Of all donations, 2.2% (lead) and 0.4% (mercury) had levels higher than the recommended thresholds for safe neonatal transfusion. BLLs were higher in males but there was no significant difference in the blood mercury levels of males versus females. Cadmium levels were higher in females. There was a positive correlation between donor age and levels of heavy metals, with lead having the strongest correlation (r = 0.47, p < .0001). Three clinics in close proximity to two lead-producing mines were among the clinics with the highest BLLs. Significantly higher blood mercury levels were observed in coastal clinics.

Conclusion: Our data on donor blood heavy metal levels supports considering blood transfusion as an exposure source to heavy metals and encourages informed selection of blood units for transfusion to vulnerable groups.

加拿大献血者体内铅、汞和镉的测量。
背景:胎儿和新生儿接触铅会对神经发育造成不可逆转的不良影响。目前还没有可靠的铅影响阈值,因此建议限制接触。据报道,婴儿输血后血铅含量(BLL)与输注的红细胞单位中的铅含量之间存在明显的相关性。我们测量了加拿大献血者血液中的铅、汞和镉水平,以调查新生儿输血中是否存在相关水平:献血者(2529 人)的全血样本在献血后 7 天内冷藏运输。加拿大全国所有永久性献血诊所均被抽样调查。对其中 12 家永久性诊所和 8 家流动诊所进行了超量采样,因为这些诊所的铅或汞含量较高。重金属采用电感耦合等离子体质谱法进行测量:在所有捐赠中,2.2%(铅)和 0.4%(汞)的含量高于新生儿安全输血的建议阈值。男性的血铅含量较高,但男性与女性的血汞含量没有明显差异。女性的镉含量更高。献血者年龄与重金属水平呈正相关,其中铅的相关性最强(r = 0.47,p 结论:献血者年龄与重金属水平呈正相关:我们关于献血者血液重金属水平的数据支持将输血视为重金属的一个暴露源,并鼓励在知情的情况下选择输血给弱势群体的血液单位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Transfusion
Transfusion 医学-血液学
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
20.70%
发文量
426
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: TRANSFUSION is the foremost publication in the world for new information regarding transfusion medicine. Written by and for members of AABB and other health-care workers, TRANSFUSION reports on the latest technical advances, discusses opposing viewpoints regarding controversial issues, and presents key conference proceedings. In addition to blood banking and transfusion medicine topics, TRANSFUSION presents submissions concerning patient blood management, tissue transplantation and hematopoietic, cellular, and gene therapies.
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