Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Accuracy of quick blood crossmatching tests in very sick dogs
By Marshall, Hayden et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2021·Department of Clinical Studies, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Accuracy of point-of-care crossmatching methods and crossmatch incompatibility in critically ill dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of critically ill dogs needing blood transfusions underwent different tests to check if their blood types matched. The study found that point-of-care tests, which are quicker and easier to use, were not as reliable as traditional lab tests for detecting blood incompatibilities. This means that even if a dog has had a transfusion before, it’s still important to perform crossmatching tests before giving them blood. The results suggest that all dogs should be tested for blood compatibility before a transfusion to ensure their safety.
People also search for: dog blood transfusion compatibility · why does my dog need a blood test · point-of-care crossmatch for dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The performance of commercial point-of-care crossmatch (CM) tests compared to laboratory tube agglutination CM is unknown. Additionally, there is limited information regarding CM incompatibility in ill dogs. OBJECTIVES: To determine if point-of-care major CM methods are accurate in detecting compatible and incompatible tests when compared to laboratory CM methods, and to identify factors associated with CM incompatibility in dogs. ANIMALS: Part 1 (prospective) included 63 client-owned dogs potentially requiring blood transfusion. Part 2 (retrospective) included all dogs from part 1, plus medical records of 141 dogs with major CM results. METHODS: For part 1, major CM was performed using a tube agglutination assay (LAB-CM), a gel-based point-of-care test (GEL-CM), and an immunochromatographic point-of-care test (IC-CM). For part 2, medical record data were collected to determine rates of and risk factors for CM incompatibility. RESULTS: Kappa agreement between the LAB-CM and GEL-CM methods could not be calculated due to a relative lack of incompatible results. Kappa agreement between the LAB-CM and IC-CM methods was 0.16 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0-0.31, P = .007) indicating no agreement. The LAB-CM incompatibility in transfusion-naïve vs dogs that had a transfusion was 25% and 35%, (P = .3). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Compared to laboratory methods, point-of-care methods evaluated in our study lacked sensitivity for detecting incompatibilities. Dogs had similar rates of major CM incompatibility regardless of transfusion history. This suggests CM testing prior to transfusion be considered in all dogs however our study did not investigate clinical relevancy of incompatible LAB-CM.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33336866/