on canvas printed with an image of myxofibrosarcoma with metastases to the artist's lung, 26" × 36". Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Submitted March 27, 2014; accepted July 23, 2014. Address correspondence to Claudia S. Cohn, MD, PhD, D242 Mayo Memorial Building, MMC 609, 420 Delaware Street, South East, Minneapolis, MN 55455. E-mail: cscohn@umn antigen (HLA) matching remains an important predictor of success with HSCT; however, the ABO barrier is often crossed when searching for the most appropriate HLA match between donor and patient. Crossing the ABO barrier has little or no effect on overall outcomes; however, complications can arise due to antigenic incompatibility between the transplanted cells and the patient.
From the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of1 This review will discuss the transfusion support of patients receiving HSCT, common transfusion-related complications that health care professionals will likely encounter, and the measures required to safely deliver blood components.HSCTs can be broadly divided into related allogeneic, unrelated allogeneic, and autologous transplantation. Hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) for allogeneic transplantation come from 3 sources: apheresis-derived, mobilized peripheral blood pro-
Transfusion Support Issues in Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation