“…The latter possibility was largely not predicted based on in vitro studies (Jackman et al , ), in vivo animal transfusion models (Muench et al , ; Slichter et al , ) and early RCTs (van Rhenen et al , ; McCullough et al , ; Mirasol Clinical Evaluation Study Group, ). More recently, insufficient statistical power prevented the collection of unequivocal evidence on PRT effect on HLA alloimmunization from one study testing samples from recipients of intercept and Mirasol‐treated platelets enrolled in the Italian Platelet Technology Assessment Study (IPTAS) RCT (Norris et al , ), whereas investigators using a larger set of samples from recipients of Mirasol‐treated platelets enrolled in the Pathogen Reduction Evaluation and Predictive Analytical Rating Score (PREPAReS) RCT reported the conclusion that their data ‘clearly indicate that Mirasol pathogen inactivation does not prevent HLA Class I or II alloimmunization after platelet transfusions’ (Saris et al , ). An elegant editorial with a self‐explanatory title that was published shortly after the latter study discusses the available, partially conflicting data and calls for additional, larger studies able to provide conclusive evidence on this issue (Stolla, ).…”