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RA unlikely to be transmitted through blood transfusions

FROM ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES

Rheumatoid arthritis does not get transmitted through blood transfusions, according to findings from a large retrospective study of blood transfusions in Denmark and Sweden.

Two separate analyses showed that the risk of developing RA among transfusion recipients was not correlated to the presence of RA in the blood donor.
There had been concern about risks of transfusion because of RA’s long preclinical phase, in which RA pathogenesis factors circulate in the periphery and could potentially be transmitted in a transfusion. Mouse models had suggested that anti–citrullinated peptide/protein antibodies could spark or worsen arthritis, and RA fibroblast-like synoviocyte cell precursors could spread RA between joints.

Two previous studies, based on self-reported history of blood transfusion, reached the opposite conclusion regarding the risk of RA transmission.
The latest findings, published online in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, involved an analysis of data from the Danish–Swedish population-based research donations and transfusions database (SCANDAT2). In one model, they looked at 938,942 blood donors, 2,412 of whom were diagnosed with RA during the follow-up period. The researchers then analyzed data from 13,369 subjects who had been exposed to blood from donors who went on to develop RA, and compared them to 139,470 recipients who received blood from donors who did not develop RA. There was no statistically significant correlation between risk of RA among recipients by RA status of the donors, RA serotype in the donors, donor age at RA diagnosis, or elapsed time between donation and RA diagnosis.