“…From these studies, it is emerging that donor habits, such as smoking or other nicotine exposures, consumption of alcohol, coffee and caffeinated, taurine-rich beverages, all impact RBC energy and redox metabolism in a way that affects storage biology and, potentially, post-transfusion performance, especially when combined with invasive processing such as RBC unit irradiation [ 195 , 196 , 197 , 198 ]. While phthalate plasticizers were historically added to polyvinylchloride bags to decrease the rigidity of the blood bag, these compounds leach from the unit and intercalate into the RBC membranes, resulting in an erythrocyte with altered deformability, decreased hemolytic propensity [ 199 , 200 ], and altered increased risk for toxicity (e.g., infertility, cardiodepression), especially in certain categories of recipients such as pediatric patients [ 201 ]. Controversial reports on the detection of metabolites of professional exposures such as Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in high-fidelity recurring donors such as firefighters have been described [ 202 ], though the potential toxicity profiles of these compounds in transfusion recipients remain to be assessed.…”