Repeat plasma donors were studied to determine whether there was a relationship between allergic-type reactions during plasmapheresis and IgE-dependent sensitization to ethylene oxide gas used for sterilization of disposable fluid administration sets. Serums from 32 donors with allergic-type reactions and 84 donors who had no reactions but were exposed to the same materials and served as controls were tested for IgE-antibodies to ethylene oxide. The results, expressed as an IgE ethylene oxide index, were greater than 2 in 78 percent of serums from donors with allergic reactions and 12 percent of serums from controls. This association was significant (p less than 0.0001). Reactivity of the antibodies was directed against an ethylene oxide-human serum albumin conjugate and not against human serum albumin carrier protein. IgG antibodies with ethylene oxide specificity also were present in the serums of repeat plasmapheresis donors. Each of seven rabbits immunized with an ethylene oxide-protein conjugate responded with a high serum level of antibody with ethylene oxide specificity. It was concluded that the residual ethylene oxide in fluid administration sets is immunogenic and may cause allergic reactions in plasma donors.
Sera from 138 patients who had experienced hypersensitivity-type reactions while on hemodialysis (reactors) were examined retrospectively by the radioallergosorbent test (RAST) for specific IgE antibody to ethylene oxide (ETO). Seventy-eight hemodialysis patients without a history of reaction were also evaluated as controls. Elevated serum RAST values (greater than 2.0) were more common in reactors (63%) than in controls (11%, p less than 0.001). In a second study, RAST assays were performed using human serum albumin conjugated to ETO (HSA-ETO) as antigen and also using a concentrate of fluid used to rinse ETO-sterilized dialyzers ("dialyzer extract") as antigen. The RAST ratios obtained with HSA-ETO were similar to those obtained using the dialyzer extract (rank order correlation coefficient = 0.829, p less than 0.001). In a third study, RAST inhibition was demonstrated both by HSA-ETO and dialyzer extract. Our results, extending previously published reports, suggest that hypersensitivity to ETO might play an important role in hemodialysis-associated hypersensitivity-type reactions.
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