New Type of Blood Transfusion on Medical Helicopters Promises to Transform Trauma Care, Improve Survival Rates

South Texas Blood & Tissue Center joins partners for ‘Brothers in Arms’ program to bring battlefield advances to civilian trauma care. A future expansion of initiative could help save more lives in mass-casualty situations. San Antonio is one of the first cities in the United States to implement the program.


San Antonio, Texas, Jan. 26, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- South Texas Blood & Tissue Center, a subsidiary of BioBridge Global, today launched a program to aid accident and trauma patients served by area air medical services and hospital helicopters. The program, “Brothers in Arms,” will enable air medical crews to administer special pre-hospital transfusions of whole blood, proven to counter blood loss and dramatically improve survival rates when tested in battlefield situations.

San Antonio is one of the first cities to implement the system, which is based on a battlefield transfusion program developed by the U.S. military and later adapted at the Mayo Clinic trauma center. The 75th Ranger Regiment “O Low-Titer Whole Blood Program” was the recipient of the Army’s Greatest Innovation Award in 2017

Research led by Dr. Donald Jenkins, a former U.S. Air Force officer and the principal architect of the Joint Trauma Theater Trauma System in Iraq and Afghanistan, showed that combining the practice of pre-hospital transfusions with specially tested units of whole blood – rather than transfusing individual blood components of red cells, plasma or platelets – is most effective in treating trauma victim suffering from significant blood loss.

“The general mortality rate for critically injured patients requiring massive transfusions at hospital trauma centers is 75 percent,” said Jenkins. “Our battlefield experience showed that providing earlier, pre-hospital transfusions of whole blood, rather than blood components or primarily red blood cells, brought mortality rates down as low as 20 percent.”

Dr. Jenkins later began to transfer the program to civilian use as trauma medical director at the Mayo Clinic. He is now a surgical critical care specialist affiliated with University Hospital in San Antonio, and the Betty and Bob Kelso Distinguished Chair in Burn and Trauma Surgery at UT Health San Antonio.

“Implementing this program for civilian use will truly transform how emergency care can be administered on medical helicopters and significantly improve survival rates for trauma victims.” said Elizabeth Waltman, COO of the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center. “This is also the first step towards a longer-term solution for saving more lives in mass-casualty situations, especially if we are able to expand the program in the future to include emergency care provided by ambulance services.”

The new program represents a collaboration involving the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center, the Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council (STRAC), University Health System, the San Antonio Military Medical Center, The US Army Institute of Surgical Research, the UT Health Science Center and medical helicopter services Air Evac Lifeteam, PHI Inc. and San Antonio AirLIFE.

The program was established in San Antonio with support from a grant provided by the San Antonio Medical Foundation.

Blood for the Brothers in Arms program will come from the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center, donated by specially tested male O-positive donors.

The universal blood type generally used for emergency transfusions, O-negative, is found in just 7 percent of the population. More than 30 percent of donors are type O-positive, making it the most common blood type. South Texas Blood & Tissue Center’s sister blood-testing organization, QualTex Laboratories, worked with the military to develop the testing protocol to identify O-positive donors with low antibody levels, making it possible to use O-positive blood for these trauma victims. The program is targeting male O-positive donors because men tend to have lower levels of certain types of antibodies in their blood than women, reducing the possibility of adverse reactions in patients.

STBTC is working to sign up a committed pool of male O-positive donors for the Brothers in Arms program to ensure a regular supply of specially tested whole blood for medical helicopters. The goal is to eventually expand the program to provide whole blood to area emergency vehicles.

Male donors who would like to see if they qualify to be a “Brothers in Arms” volunteer are encouraged to call 210-731-5590 to schedule an appointment for testing.

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About the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center: The South Texas Blood & Tissue Center (STBTC) is a nonprofit community blood center that provides blood, plasma, platelets and other blood components to more than 70 hospitals in 43 South Texas counties. It is the largest blood supplier in our region. STBTC has a proud 42-year history serving the South Texas community. The center is a subsidiary of BioBridge Global, a nonprofit organization comprising services for regenerative medicine and research including blood banking and resource management; cellular therapy; umbilical cord blood collection and storage; donated human tissue recovery and distribution for transplant; and testing of blood and plasma products to help patients in South Texas, the United States and worldwide. STBTC has seven donor rooms in South Texas and conducts thousands of mobile blood drives each year. Visit us at SouthTexasBlood.org and BioBridgeGlobal.org.

Attachments:

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/883961db-e22f-4e83-9988-776c5cac8542

Attachments:

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a53bee65-bcfe-4b6b-bd53-3ee060963023

Attachments:

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/da72805f-6352-4a05-8fd6-c4bed9270e06


            
A technician with the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center collects a sample as part of a blood donation. Logo for the Brothers in Arms project

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