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Blood Donors clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06021925 Recruiting - Blood Donors Clinical Trials

Obstetrical History and Anti-HLA Antibodies Level

OBS-HLA
Start date: December 13, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Chronic histiocytic intervillositis (CHI) is associated with severe and recurrent obstetrical complications. A link between anti-HLA Antibodies (Ab) and CHI has recently been established. At the Etablissement Français du Sang (EFS), donors who have already given birth once and have high levels of anti-HLA are excluded from donating apheresis platelets and therapeutic plasma to prevent TRALI (Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury). No studies have examined the obstetrical history of these donors. The question is: is there an association between anti-HLA levels and obstetrical complications?

NCT ID: NCT04078893 Recruiting - Blood Donors Clinical Trials

The Effect of Recruiting Inactive Blood Donors Using Different Means

Start date: October 20, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

14098 inactive donors were randomly divided into three groups according to age, sex, blood donation frequency,time of last donation and blood donation site, one group acted as the control group, one will be recruited by telephone recruitment on "need", and one will just be called for improvement suggestions of blood donor service.

NCT ID: NCT00001846 Recruiting - Blood Donors Clinical Trials

Collection and Distribution of Blood Components From Healthy Donors for In Vitro Research Use

Start date: January 11, 2001
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This protocol is designed to provide a mechanism for the Department of Transfusion Medicine, Clinical Center to collect and process blood components from paid, healthy volunteer donors for distribution to NIH intramural investigators and FDA researchers for in vitro laboratory use. Donors meeting research donor eligibility criteria will be recruited to donate blood and blood components by standard phlebotomy and apheresis techniques. The investigational nature of the studies in which their blood will be used, and the risks and discomforts of the donation process will be carefully explained to the donors, and a signed informed consent document will be obtained. Donors will be compensated according to an established schedule based on the duration and discomfort of the donation. NIH and FDA investigators requesting blood components for research use will be required to submit an electronic (Web-based) memo of request, briefly describing the nature of the research, and providing assurance that samples provided through this protocol will be used solely for in vitro and not for in vivo research. This protocol also provides a detailed schema for careful and frequent laboratory safety monitoring of repeat research apheresis donors. Blood components for research use will be distributed with a unique product number, and the DTM principal and associate investigators will serve as the custodians of the code that links the product with a donor s identity. The nature of the in vitro studies in which the blood and components collected in this study will be used is not the subject of this protocol, and is not possible to describe, since it involves basic investigative efforts in greater than 170 different NIH and FDA laboratories. The intent of this protocol is not to approve the research itself, but to provide adequate and complete informed consent for the donor, and to assure that the education, counseling, and protection of the study subjects (research blood donors) is performed in accordance with IRB, OHSR, OPRR and other applicable Federal regulatory standards