American Red Cross Position Statement to
the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopthy (TSE) Committee
The safety of the blood supply is paramount and is
the American Red Cross’s number one priority. The Red Cross and the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) believe it was a prudent step to
ensure blood safety by deferring blood donors who have traveled to or
lived in the United Kingdom based on the theoretical risk of vCJD and
the lack of a blood screening test.
The current deferral is for people who have traveled to or resided in
the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Isle of
Man or the Channel Islands) for 6 months or more between 1980 and 1996.
The American Red Cross supports expanding this deferral to include
France as well as all of Western Europe given the growing evidence of
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopthy (BSE) in those countries. We believe the
Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopthy (TSE) committee should consider a
further tightening of the deferral period to less than six months in the
U.K. We also believe the committee should examine extending the exposure
period between 1980 to the present, instead of the current deferral
between 1980 and 1996.
There is evidence in animal models that TSE is transmissible through
blood. We must be cautious to ensure the safety of America’s blood
supply for vulnerable patients.
The American Red Cross calls for expanded research to better
understand TSE pathogens and to create a TSE-specific blood screening
test. We believe that if this is done, in the next two to three years we
will have a means to assess the true risk, which will better inform our
donor selection criteria.
We estimate that expanding the deferral criteria would reduce the
current number of Red Cross blood donors in the range of 5 to 6 percent.
Therefore, it is our shared obligation to embark on a sustained national
campaign to educate the public to increase the number of American blood
donors.
The American Red Cross knows it will take a major investment of time,
money and resources to attract new donors and retain current donors to
meet the increasing needs of patients nationwide. We are prepared to
take on this public responsibility along with others who share our
mission to ensure a safe and available blood supply.
The Red Cross is prepared to implement tightened donor criteria
across our national system.
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