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EDITORIAL EDITORIAL Universal RBCs A ntigens on RBCs have been a problem for blood transfusion right from the start. In the mid-17th century, Jean Denis in France and Richard Lower in England attempted animal-to-human blood transfusions, only to be foiled by (among many factors) the presence of incompatibilities between the animal RBCs and human serum. James Blundell’s use of human-to-human blood transfusions in the early 19th century lowered the immunologic barrier, but major RBC antigenic differences between humans led to hemolytic reactions. With Landsteiner’s discovery of the ABO blood group antigens on RBCs and associated serum isoagglutinins a century ago,1 the major cause of this immune reaction had been found, and successful blood transfusion could be achieved. Blood samples from donor and patient were each tested and classified into one of the four phenotypes—O, A, B, or AB—which allowed the donor and patient phenotypes to be matched. At the turn of this new century, typing of ABO antigens still remains the critical step in RBC transfusion, necessitated by the presence of preexisting antibodies to A and/or B antigens in individuals lacking these antigens. The entire system of blood collection, distribution, and transfusion revolves around the ABO blood groups. Elimination of this need for typing, by the creation of a universal RBC for transfusion, would bring about a revolution in blood banking akin to that which followed Landsteiner’s discovery of the ABO blood group system. So what are the potential methods with which to accomplish this task? Will universal RBCs be coming to neighborhood blood centers and hospitals anytime soon? The term “universal RBC” could have several meanings. Group O persons are considered universal RBC donors because they lack the antigens of the ABO blood group system, and thus their RBCs can be transfused to any recipient without concern for preexisting ABO antibodies. Blood donor and recipient are also matched for D antigen, despite the lack of anti-D in nonimmunized recipients, because the immunization rate is greater than 50 percent upon exposure of D– recipients to the D antigen. Thus, O– could be considered the universal RBC. Finally, a small percentage of patients have preexisting antibodies to one or more of the several hundred additional antigens described on RBCs, so a truly universal RBC would have to be negative for all of these antigens. (This discussion is limited to universal TRANSFUSION 2000;40:1285-1289. RBCs; products such as Hb-based oxygen carriers are also universal, in that they can be transfused to any patient.) Two general approaches could be used to make a universal RBC. The RBC antigens can be removed permanently from the RBC surface, or they can be masked to avoid recognition by the immune system. This recognition by the immune system could lead to an immediate reaction via preexisting antibodies in the recipient against antigens on donor RBCs or to later alloimmunization to these antigens. There has been substantial progress along both of these research directions, yielding RBC products of differing characteristics and different potential uses in transfusion medicine. ENZYMATICALLY CONVERTED GROUP O CELLS Work in the 1950s and 1960s by Morgan, Watkins, Kabat, and others elucidated the carbohydrate structures of the ABO antigens on glycolipids and glycoproteins (reviewed by Hakomori2). It was shown that these antigens differed only in the terminal monosaccharide attached to the precursor H oligosaccharide antigen: N-acetylgalactosamine for group A, galactose for group B, and no added monosaccharide for group O (remains H antigen). This raised the possibility that A and B antigens could be converted back to H antigen by the removal of the terminal monosaccharide unit by an appropriate exoglycosidase, α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase for group A and α-galactosidase for group B. Pioneering studies by the late Jack Goldstein and colleagues3 at the New York Blood Center demonstrated that this process of enzymatic conversion of group B RBCs to group O could be carried out with the enzyme coffee bean α-galactosidase under conditions that leave the RBCs physically and functionally intact and suitable for transfusion. Studies in group O or group A volunteer recipients showed that these enzymatically converted group O (ECO) cells functioned essentially identically to group O RBCs; there was no evidence of acute transfusion reactions or hemolysis, and RBC survival in the recipients was normal.4 Multi-unit or second transfusions were also well tolerated.5,6 An occasional serologic finding in the recipients of these ECO cells was an increase in the titer of anti-B or an incompatibility of recipient serum with ECO cells. As there was no evidence of associated clinical problems, the meaning of these serologic results was not clear. Volume 40, November 2000 TRANSFUSION 1285 EDITORIAL In this issue of TRANSFUSION, Kruskall and colleagues7 extend these studies by reporting a Phase II trial of the transfusion of ECO (B-to-O) RBCs to transfusion-dependent patients of group O or A. In this crossover study of 24 patients of group O or A, the patients were given either ECO or group O RBCs; 18 patients subsequently received a transfusion with the alternate product. Overall, the transfusions of ECO RBCs appeared safe and effective; there were no acute transfusion reactions or evidence of hemolysis, and chromium survival studies showed that the lifespans of the transfused ECO and group O RBCs were equal. However, a number of in vitro serologic abnormalities were noted, which were similar to observations in the previous studies of ECO RBC transfusions to normal volunteers.4,5 Five of 19 patients who received ECO RBCs had significant increases in anti-B titers, and 2 of these patients had incompatible antiglobulin crossmatches with ECO RBCs.7 While the rising anti-B titers most certainly reflect an immune response to a small residual number of B epitopes on the ECO RBCs (compared to the original levels of approx. 0.8 × 106/RBC), this weak antigen expression did not appear to cause measurable hemolysis in these patients. The incompatible crossmatches with ECO RBCs found with the serum from two patients is potentially concerning. Despite the reassuring finding of normal transfusion results in these patients, additional work must be done to deduce the target of this antibody (residual B? neoantigen?) and its clinical significance. Otherwise, the finding in this study7 that 20 percent of group A patients and 40 percent of group O patients had incompatible crossmatches with ECO RBCs (often, weak reactions detectable only in the antiglobulin phase) would, at the least, introduce complicating serologic results into the testing protocol with an ECO blood supply, and, more worrisome, might lead to reduced ECO RBC survival in vivo. These questions require further study. Nonetheless, it is fair to state that this overall research program has produced very strong and convincing data supporting the proposal that an ECO RBC produced by B-to-O conversion would serve as a universal RBC suitable for transfusion. Is this of any practical use to the blood supply? Simply put, the answer is no. That is because the great benefit of ECO RBCs would be to convert the blood supply to a totally group O supply. Shifting an extra 10 percent from group B into the group O total and, potentially, another 5 percent from group AB enzymatically converted to group A would reduce the blood supply to an approximately equal mixture of group O and group A. This would do very little to alleviate the collection and inventory difficulties arising from the fact that blood donors have more than one ABO phenotype, nor would it prevent the sometimes fatal complications of ABO transfusion errors. Moreover, no additional blood units are actually produced, as the increased group O plus ECO (B-to-O) RBC supply must now support the larger group O plus group B patient population. Although the small percentage of group B units that normally outdate could be enzy1286 TRANSFUSION Volume 40, November 2000 matically converted to group O RBCs, which would increase the blood supply, the ECO technology would not be economically viable if used solely for this purpose. For ECO RBCs to become a universal blood supply, there must be a process for A-to-O conversion. The original hope that this could be accomplished in a fashion parallel to the B-to-O process by the use of an α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase enzyme for A-to-O conversion has been dashed by the biochemical complexity of the A antigen (see Fig. 1 in the article by Kruskall et al.7 in this issue of TRANSFUSION). Epitopes of A can exist at both the terminal positions of the oligosaccharide chains, where they can be removed by an α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase enzyme, and at internal positions, where they would be resistant to this exoglycosidase enzyme. Research aimed at the removal of all A epitopes is ongoing, but until this problem yields a biochemical solution, one must be guarded in predicting the future of a universal ECO blood supply. Let us take a look at what future blood banking would be like if the A-to-O conversion were accomplished and led to a totally group O blood supply, a mixture of ECO and group O RBCs. It would be a completely different world, in which many of the daily activities in blood centers and hospitals would simply vanish. No more ABO to track for donors and patients. No more worries for recruiters at blood centers about meeting separate targets for individual blood groups, which can lead to overcollection to meet higher group O needs. No longer would inventory managers have to ship blood around the country to redress the misalignment of blood group targets among regions. Nor would hospital transfusion services (or blood centers at each intermediate transfer) have to reconfirm the ABO type of blood units. ABO transfusion errors, the most serious and life-threatening of transfusion reactions, would not occur. (But a caveat must be inserted here. Currently, ABO-incompatible RBC transfusions occur because of error at some stage of patient or blood unit identification, at an estimated rate of 1 in 33,000 transfusions, 6 percent of which have fatal outcomes.8 In a universal ECO blood supply, ABO identification is no longer a problem, but the treatment process converting group A, B, or AB cells to group O is the concern. Rigorous attention to good manufacturing practices and rigorous QC are critical to the avoidance of acute hemolytic transfusion reactions that could occur if the group A, B, or AB antigens are not completely removed during the enzymatic process to produce the ECO RBCs.) Overall, a universal ECO blood supply presents an appealing picture, but it all must wait for the carbohydrate biochemists to solve the A-to-O conversion problem. STEALTH CELLS While this research on ECO RBCs has proceeded for about 25 years, other investigators9-12 over the past half-dozen years have taken a different approach to universal RBCs by EDITORIAL attempting to mask the RBC antigens. This masking, or camouflaging, of antigens produces a “stealth” RBC that cannot be detected by the immune system, which prevents antigen–antibody reactions with preexisting antibodies, as well as alloimmunization to additional antigens.13-15 The method is to treat the RBC surface with PEG, a neutral polyether polymer with the chemical structure HO(CH2CH2O)n-CH2CH2OH. PEG exists in a variety of forms of differing molecular weights and branching patterns, and it can be covalently coupled to proteins on the RBC surface through a number of linking compounds. The background for this work on RBCs was the demonstration that PEG treatment of purified proteins reduced or eliminated their immunogenicity, while leaving the proteins with normal function and showing no toxicity of these pegylated proteins when injected into animals or humans (indeed, a Hbbased oxygen carrier of potential benefit in transfusion medicine is modified by PEG). PEG treatment of RBCs provides a protective shell around the RBC that excludes large molecules, such as antibodies, but does not appear to inhibit the interaction of the RBC with small molecules, such as glucose and oxygen, that are critical to RBC metabolism. This PEG shell arises from extensive hydration coupled with the flexibility and charge neutrality of PEG molecules; the net result is a large volume of exclusion around the RBC. Each of the four groups9-12 working on PEG RBCs took somewhat different approaches in the exact chemistry employed to produce PEG RBCs and in the in vitro and in vivo animal testing that they used. Taken together, the set of initial results reported 3 or 4 years ago showed that PEG modification of the RBC surface could significantly reduce the antibody-mediated agglutination of PEG RBCs for both the ABO system and non-ABO systems including the Rh, Kell, Duffy, and Kidd systems. One group13 demonstrated markedly reduced immunogenicity of PEG RBCs in a mouse model, perhaps correlating with the reduced ability of phagocytic cells to interact with the PEG RBCs. In vitro tests of the structure and function of the PEG RBCs suggested that the RBCs (treated with low concentrations of PEG) had not been significantly damaged by the pegylation and that they retained their normal oxygen-binding and -transport capacity9 and had normal RBC deformability.16 Limited in vivo studies of PEG RBCs in mice and rats showed that when RBCs were prepared with low concentrations of PEG, survival was normal, but treatment with higher concentrations of PEG resulted in poor in vivo survival.16 In addition, more sensitive in vitro tests of antigen recognition, including flow cytometry and antiglobulin testing, clearly showed that the antigens were still detectable on the PEG RBCs, especially for the ABO antigens.15 Nonetheless, these initial results were a clear proof that antigenicity and immunogenicity could be substantially reduced by PEG modification of the RBC surface. For a very new research field, this is quite a promising start. The key question is whether the PEG blockade can be increased without damage to the RBCs, and thereby a universal RBC can be created, or whether practical use can be made of a less than fully antigen-masked RBC in certain clinical transfusion circumstances. Promising new research is using a second-generation pegylation process, with changes in either the molecular weights and branching of the PEG13,17 or crosslinking of PEG with other proteins,18 to produce PEG RBCs that have completely masked non-ABO antigens such as D, Kidd, and Duffy, as judged by antiglobulin testing and flow cytometry; exposure of ABO antigens is markedly reduced but clearly not eliminated. Again, this is tremendously exciting progress, but the PEG RBC field is much newer and less advanced than the ECO RBC field. Collection of animal and, eventually, human data (comparable to those from studies of ECO RBCs3-7) on the in vivo results of PEG RBC transfusions and monitoring for transfusion reactions, hemolysis, chromium survival studies, antibody formation (including antibodies to neo-antigens created by the pegylation process), and other potential toxicities will have to be performed to find out if the initial promise of this research bears fruit. If the research on PEG RBCs shows that they truly are stealth cells that evade the immune system, how can they best be used in transfusion medicine? Stealth cells that completely mask the ABO antigens would be a rival universal RBC to ECO RBCs. Indeed, they would be a better product, for they would mask ABO and non-ABO antigens, but it is too early to predict whether this will be possible. Because the results to date have shown complete masking of non-ABO antigens on PEG RBCs, as judged by in vitro tests, it would be expected (but of course, must actually be shown in animal models and then in humans) that these PEG RBCs would have essentially normal survival and markedly reduced immunogenicity. There are clinical transfusion situations in which these RBCs would be a great benefit: in patients with antibodies to high-incidence antigens, a mixture of antibodies to multiple antigens, or autoantibodies. PEG RBCs could be life-saving in a patient for whom no compatible blood is available. In addition, the reduced or absent immunogenicity of the PEG RBC would be beneficial in chronically transfused patients, such as those with sickle cell disease or thalassemia, who can have immunization rates of 30 percent or more. Transfusing these patients with PEG RBCs would markedly reduce or eliminate new immunizations. It is not clear if the blockade of D on the stealth RBC will be sufficient for these RBCs to be truly considered D–; thus, stealth RBCs might not be suitable for transfusion to a 20-year-old woman who is D– and who, if immunized against D, could have a future pregnancy in which HDN affects her baby. A potential additional benefit of PEG RBCs derives from the finding that these RBCs have Volume 40, November 2000 TRANSFUSION 1287 EDITORIAL reduced aggregation and a lower viscosity at low shear rates,12 so they could improve blood flow in vasoocclusive situations, such as arise in sickle cell disease. INTO THE FUTURE As we assess this knowledge and peer into the future of this research, what do Fig. 1. The blood bank factory, circa 2005. A unit of RBCs prepared from the donor we see? ECO technology is further along (group A, D+ in this example) is processed by the blood bank factory, with successive and has undergone successful testing in machines performing WBC reduction, pathogen inactivation, enzymatic conversion humans, but the big challenge is to de(removal) of the A antigen, and pegylation to mask all non-ABO antigens, including rive a biochemical process to achieve AD. The final product, a WBC-reduced, pathogen-free, stealth ECO RBC, is a universal to-O conversion. Stealth technology has RBC for transfusion to any patient, regardless of ABO group, D phenotype, or the demonstrated that it can mask non-ABO presence of alloantibodies or autoantibodies to any RBC antigens. antigens as assessed in vitro, but so far it falls short on ABO antigens and has not REFERENCES yet been tried in any human transfusions. The results to date are exciting and hold tremendous promise. At this 01. Landsteiner K. Uber agglutinationserscheinungen time, a reasonable proposal would be to combine these normalen menslichen blutes. Wien Klin Wochenschr technologies, yielding stealth ECO RBCs. These could very 1901:14:1132-4. well be the true universal RBCs, with no (or very low) anti02. Hakomori S. Blood group ABH and Ii antigens of human genicity and immunogenicity for ABO and non-ABO antierythrocytes: chemistry, polymorphism, and their developgens and improved blood flow characteristics. mental change. Semin Hematol 1981;18:39-62. Universal RBCs would revolutionize our processes of 03. Goldstein J, Siviglia G, Hurst R, et al. Group B erythrocytes delivering blood from the donor to the patient. Many invenenzymatically converted to group O survive normally in A, tory management issues that are associated with the B, and O individuals. Science 1982;215:168-70. present RBC donor supply consisting of multiple ABO phe04. Lenny LL, Hurst R, Goldstein J, et al. Single-unit transfunotypes would vanish. RBCs would be readily available for sions of RBC enzymatically converted from group B to group O immunized patients who previously could not be provided to A and O normal volunteers. Blood 1991:77:1383-8. with crossmatch-compatible RBCs. This universal RBC sup05. Lenny LL, Hurst R, Goldstein J, Galbraith RA. Transfusions ply would be created by the blood bank factory of the futo group O subjects of 2 units of red cells enzymatically ture (Fig. 1). This factory, most likely located within or adconverted from group B to group O. Transfusion jacent to the blood donor center, would take the donor 1994:34:209-14. RBCs and process them through a series of treatment steps. 06. Lenny LL, Hurst R, Zhu A, et al. Multiple-unit and second Inclusion of any technology in the blood bank factory will transfusions of red cells enzymatically converted from require clear evidence of significant clinical benefit and group B to group O: report on the end of Phase 1 trials. consideration of cost-benefit and risk-benefit issues. AlTransfusion 1995;35:899-902. ready widespread is the process of prestorage WBC reduc07. Kruskall MS, AuBuchon JP, Anthony KY, et al. Transfusion tion (whether this should be a universal process is a subto blood group A and O patients of group B RBCs that have ject of controversy).19 Processes for pathogen inactivation been enzymatically converted to group O. Transfusion are currently undergoing clinical trials.20 The methods of 2000;40:1290-8. enzyme conversion and pegylation could produce the 08. Linden JV, Paul B, Dressler KP. A report of 104 transfusion stealth ECO RBC for universal RBC transfusion. The promerrors in New York State. Transfusion 1992;32:601-6. ise of the future, the results of decades of basic and applied 09. Jeong ST, Byun SM. Decreased agglutinability of methoxyresearch in transfusion medicine,21 the goal of improved polyethylene glycol attached red blood cells: significance as patient transfusion therapy—all could issue forth from this a blood substitute. Artif Cells Blood Substit Immobil blood bank factory. Biotechnol 1996;24:503-11. Douglas M. Lublin, MD, PhD 10. Hortin GL, Lok HT, Huang ST. Progress toward preparation Department of Pathology and Immunology Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis, MO 63110 e-mail: [email protected] 1288 TRANSFUSION Volume 40, November 2000 of universal donor red cells. Artif Cells Blood Substit Immobil Biotechnol 1997;25:487-91. 11. Scott MD, Murad KL, Koumpouras F, et al. Chemical camouflage of antigenic determinants: stealth erythrocytes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1997;94:7566-71. EDITORIAL 12. Armstrong JK, Meiselman HJ, Fisher TC. Covalent binding of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) to the surface of red blood cells inhibits aggregation and reduces low shear blood viscosity. Am J Hematol 1997;56:26-8. 13. Scott MD, Bradley AJ, Murad KL. Camouflaged blood cells: low-technology bioengineering for transfusion medicine? Transfus Med Rev 2000;14:53-63. 14. Fisher TC. PEG-coated red blood cells—simplifying blood transfusion in the new millenium? Immunohematology 2000;16:37-58. 15. Garratty G. Stealth erythrocytes—a possible transfusion product for the new century? Vox Sang 2000;78(Suppl 2):143-7. 16. Murad KL, Mahany KL, Brugnara C, et al. Structural and functional consequences of antigenic modulation of red blood cells with methoxypoly(ethylene glycol). Blood 1999;93:2121-7. 17. Fisher TC, Armstrong, JK, Meiselman JH, et al. Properties of poly(ethylene glycol)-conjugated red blood cells. In: Tsuchida E, ed. Blood substitutes: present and future perspectives. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science, 1998:297-313. 18. Huang ST, Hortin GL, Huang Z. Coating of red blood cells with crosslinked polyethylene glycol (XPEG) inhibits agglutination and shows favorable red cell survival (abstract). Transfusion 1998;38(Suppl):62S. 19. Thurer RL, Luban NLC, AuBuchon JP, et al. Universal WBC reduction (letter). Transfusion 2000;40:751-2. 20. Corash L. Inactivation of viruses, bacteria, protozoa, and leukocytes in platelet concentrates: current research perspectives. Transfus Med Rev 1999;13:18-30. 21. McCullough J. Research in transfusion medicine (editorial). Transfusion 2000;40:1033-5. Volume 40, November 2000 TRANSFUSION 1289