Seminars in Hematology
Volume 44, Issue 1 , Pages 51-59, January 2007

Red Cell Substitutes

  • Robert M. Winslow

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to Robert M. Winslow, MD, Sangart, Inc, 6175 Lusk Blvd, San Diego, CA 92121.

Sangart, Inc, and Department of Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, CA.

Oxygen-carrying plasma expanders (blood substitutes) have been sought for over a century. Development of current products is a result of evolution in the understanding of proteins in general, of hemoglobin in particular, and of how cell-free hemoglobin interacts with the control of local blood flow to ensure adequate tissue oxygenation. Hemoglobin-based products are considered in four “generations” corresponding to major improvements. First-generation products consisted of hemoglobin, freed of red cell membranes (stroma-free hemoglobin [SFH]), which was renal toxic and vasoactive. Second-generation products were polymerized with aldehyde reagents to reduce or eliminate the renal toxicity, but the products were heterogeneous and still vasoactive. Third-generation products employed more specific intramolecular crosslinking to eliminate polymerization and promote homogeneity, but they also remained vasoactive. Fourth-generation products are based on a new understanding of the way in which microvascular blood flow is controlled and the influence of O2 delivery to vascular walls. After more than a century of research, one of these new solutions should find use as an alternative to red cells for transfusion in certain clinical settings.

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 Supported, in part, by NHLBI Grants No. HL-076163 and No. R01 HL62354 and by Sangart, Inc

PII: S0037-1963(06)00235-6

doi:10.1053/j.seminhematol.2006.09.013

Seminars in Hematology
Volume 44, Issue 1 , Pages 51-59, January 2007