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Methodological considerations for linked blood donor‐component‐recipient analyses in transfusion medicine research
Authors:Nareg H. Roubinian  Steven Kleinman  Edward L. Murphy  Simone A. Glynn  Gustaf Edgren
Abstract:In recent years, there has been a concerted effort to improve our understanding of the quality and effectiveness of transfused blood components. The expanding use of large datasets built from electronic health records allows the investigation of potential benefits or adverse outcomes associated with transfusion therapy. Together with information regarding blood donor demographics and component collection and manufacturing, these datasets permit evaluation of associations between donor or component factors and transfusion recipient outcomes. Large linked 'vein‐to‐vein' datasets provide the power to study exposures relevant to transfusion efficacy and safety, many of which would not otherwise be amenable to study for practical or sample size reasons. Analyses of these large donor‐component‐recipient datasets allow for characterization of the populations under study and provide an evidence base for future clinical studies. Knowledge generated from linked analyses has the potential to change the way donors are selected and how components are processed, stored and allocated. However, unrecognized confounding and biased statistical methods continue to be limitations in the study of transfusion exposures and patient outcomes. Given these challenges, results of observational studies of blood donor demographics, storage age and transfusion practice have been conflicting. This review summarizes statistical and methodological challenges in analyses of linked blood donor, component and transfusion recipient outcomes.
Keywords:blood donors  blood component production  red cells  transfusion medicine  big data  epidemiology
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