Background The BORN trial suggested that using cord blood-red blood cells (CB-RBCs) to transfuse severely preterm neonates significantly improves clinical outcomes compared to standard adult donor RBCs (A-RBC).Study Design and Methods The study illustrates CB-RBC concentrate production and inventory management across nine CB banks participating in the BORN trial. Quality requirements were those established by the European regulation for leukocyte-depleted RBC concentrates in additive solution. The compliance rate among centers was reported.Results During the BORN study, 451 CB-RBC units were processed and 107 were transfused to 69 patients in the intervention arm. However, for 67 transfusion requests, no compatible CB-RBC units were available and adult-RBCs were given. The CB-RBC inventory comprised a minor fraction of CB units collected during the study period, suggesting that many did not meet the protocol-defined volume threshold of 67 mL at collection. Quality control results showed that 84.0% of units achieved target hematocrit (Htc) levels (50-70%), with higher success rates in centers processing more CB units. All centers met quality standards, maintaining residual leukocytes below 1 & times; 106 and end-storage hemolysis below 0.8% in more than 90% of cases. CB-RBC availability was significantly limited by the time required for bacterial testing results and the need for gamma-irradiation.Discussion These data suggest that the standardized CB-RBC production is reproducible. Moreover, extending CB-RBC storage to 21 days could maximize the inventory utility.
Pellegrino, C., Papacci, P., Dani, C., Cresi, F., Remaschi, G., Ansaldi, G., Giannantonio, C., Campagnoli, M. F., Vania, B., Fabbri, M., Aragona, R. P. D. V. D., Molisso, A., Beccastrini, E., Dragonetti, A., Pasciuto, T., Gabbriellini, S., Baroni, S., Serrao, F., Purcaro, V., Raffaeli, G., Villa, S., Prati, D., Mondello, I., Falcone, A., Patti, M. L., Boggini, T., Bergamaschi, P., Mozzetta, I., Valentini, C. G., Locatelli, E., Albiani, R., Besso, F. G., Cantone, G. V., Coscia, A., Trimarchi, A., Capone, A., Ghirardello, S., Vento, G., Teofili, L., Cord blood red cell concentrates for preterm neonate transfusion: Insights from the multicenter BORN trial, <<TRANSFUSION>>, 2026; (N/A): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.1111/trf.70241] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/336023]
Cord blood red cell concentrates for preterm neonate transfusion: Insights from the multicenter BORN trial
Pellegrino, Claudio;Papacci, Patrizia;Giannantonio, Carmen;Pasciuto, Tina;Baroni, Silvia;Serrao, Francesca;Purcaro, Velia;Valentini, Caterina Giovanna;Cantone, Giulia Vanina;Vento, Giovanni;Teofili, Luciana
2026
Abstract
Background The BORN trial suggested that using cord blood-red blood cells (CB-RBCs) to transfuse severely preterm neonates significantly improves clinical outcomes compared to standard adult donor RBCs (A-RBC).Study Design and Methods The study illustrates CB-RBC concentrate production and inventory management across nine CB banks participating in the BORN trial. Quality requirements were those established by the European regulation for leukocyte-depleted RBC concentrates in additive solution. The compliance rate among centers was reported.Results During the BORN study, 451 CB-RBC units were processed and 107 were transfused to 69 patients in the intervention arm. However, for 67 transfusion requests, no compatible CB-RBC units were available and adult-RBCs were given. The CB-RBC inventory comprised a minor fraction of CB units collected during the study period, suggesting that many did not meet the protocol-defined volume threshold of 67 mL at collection. Quality control results showed that 84.0% of units achieved target hematocrit (Htc) levels (50-70%), with higher success rates in centers processing more CB units. All centers met quality standards, maintaining residual leukocytes below 1 & times; 106 and end-storage hemolysis below 0.8% in more than 90% of cases. CB-RBC availability was significantly limited by the time required for bacterial testing results and the need for gamma-irradiation.Discussion These data suggest that the standardized CB-RBC production is reproducible. Moreover, extending CB-RBC storage to 21 days could maximize the inventory utility.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



