Harefield Gazette

Plasma donation begins in London

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PEOPLE in and around Twickenham have begun donating blood plasma for medicines for the first time in more than 20 years.

This plasma will be used to make antibody-based medicines – called immunoglob­ulins - for people with rare immune diseases.

Twickenham plasma donor centre is one of the 14 NHS Blood and Transplant donor centres around England now taking donations, for an initial three-month period.

Thousands of patients rely on immunoglob­ulin medicines for short-term or lifelong diseases and genetic disorders.

Around 950 of these patients are on the West London patient panels.

With rising demand across the world for these medicines there is a global supply shortage (3). These donations will bolster the supply chain and improve the self-sufficienc­y of the UK in producing its own treatments.

They will be taken at repurposed former convalesce­nt plasma donor centres, originally created for coronaviru­s research.

Henry Jarvis, Twickenham Plasma Donor Centre Manager, said, “Like blood donation, plasma donation will be altruistic, for the benefit of the NHS and we’re here ready to collect it.

“We’re asking people, if contacted by us, please donate plasma for medicines – you will save and transform lives.”

More than 500 people have donated in the two weeks since collection started, and nearly 250 people are booked in to donate this week at Twickenham plasma donor centre, which is in Regal House on London Road.

The antibody medicines are used to treat people with weak immune systems and a variety of other rare disorders. Illnesses include: ■ Immune disorders such as Common Variable Immune Deficiency. ■ Neurologic­al disorders such as Guillain–Barre syndrome and myasthenia gravis. ■ Haematolog­ical disorders such as cytopenia - a low mature red blood cell count, which can occur following radiothera­py and chemothera­py for cancer treatment. ■ Dermatolog­ical disorders such as Kawasaki syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis.

When people donate, the plasma is filtered out of circulatin­g blood by an apheresis machine and the red blood cells are returned to the donor.

Several thousand donors will initially be recruited from the existing NHSBT blood donor base, rather than the general public. Open recruitmen­t will be introduced in the future. To find out more about blood plasma donation, visit www. blood.co.uk or call 0300 123 23 23.

The restrictio­n on using plasma from UK donors was introduced in 1998 as a precaution­ary measure against Variant Creutzfeld­t–Jakob disease .

 ??  ?? Twickenham is one of 14 places in England where plasma can be donated
Twickenham is one of 14 places in England where plasma can be donated

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