A new study by US researchers found that patients given transfusions of blood stored for more than 4 weeks were nearly three times as likely to develop urinary-tract infections, pneumonia and infections associated with intravenous lines, as those getting fresher blood.
Overall, 57 patients developed one or more blood stream infections while they were hospitalized and 11 percent of the patients died. Patients that received blood that was older than 42 days were 2.9 more likely to develop one or more infections, including pneumonia, upper respiratory infection, sepsis and/or shock, than those who received fresher blood.
David Gerber, D.O., study co-author and
associate director of the medical/surgical intensive care unit at
After two weeks, stored red blood cells experience changes that promote the release of biochemical substances called “cytokines” that can lower a patient's immune function and render them more vulnerable to infection, the researchers explained. High levels of cytokines could make patients more predisposed to infection.