Apheresis Procedure Reference

Technical and clinical guidance for all major therapeutic apheresis procedures — mechanism, indication, protocol, replacement fluids, and safety considerations.

TPE RBC Exchange ECP LDL Apheresis Immunoadsorption Leukocytapheresis Erythrocytapheresis DFPP CAR-T Leukapheresis

How Apheresis Works

All apheresis procedures share a common principle: blood is withdrawn from the patient, passed through a separation device, a target component is removed or modified, and the remaining blood is returned to the patient — usually with a replacement fluid to maintain volume.

Two primary separation technologies are used:

Centrifugal Separation: Blood components are separated by density using centrifugal force. Plasma, platelets, buffy coat (WBCs), and RBCs form distinct layers. Used in the Spectra Optia® system and most modern apheresis platforms.

Membrane Filtration: Plasma passes through hollow-fiber membranes with defined pore sizes, separating components based on molecular weight. Used in double-filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP) and membrane plasma separation.

Spectra Optia System — Key Parameters

AC Infusion Rate 0.8 mL/min/L TBV
Inlet:AC Ratio 10.0 (default)
Plasma Volumes Exchanged 0.5–2.5 TPV
Packing Factor (typical) 15–20
AIM System Auto interface management

Spectra Optia (Terumo BCT) — industry reference centrifugal apheresis system

Therapeutic Plasma Exchange (TPE)

Most Common Procedure

Therapeutic Plasma Exchange (TPE) is the most widely performed apheresis procedure. Whole blood is separated, plasma is removed, and the cellular components are returned to the patient with a replacement fluid. The procedure targets large molecular weight substances: autoantibodies, immune complexes, cryoglobulins, paraproteins, toxins, and inflammatory mediators that would be too large for conventional clearance.

Replacement Fluids

5% Albumin — Most common. Avoids infectious risk and allergic reactions from FFP. Does not replenish coagulation factors.

Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP) — Required for TTP (replenishes ADAMTS13). Risk of allergic reactions, TRALI, infection.

Combination — Albumin + normal saline combinations used to control cost while maintaining colloid oncotic pressure.

Efficiency by Plasma Volume

0.5 TPV
39%
1.0 TPV
63%
1.5 TPV
78%
2.0 TPV
86%
2.5 TPV
92%

Percent removal of intravascular substance assuming first-order kinetics. Standard practice: 1–1.5 TPV per procedure.

Anticoagulation

Citrate (ACD-A) is the primary anticoagulant. It chelates ionized calcium, preventing coagulation in the circuit. Monitoring for hypocalcemia is essential. Heparin may be added in select cases. Citrate is metabolized by the liver — caution in hepatic failure.

Key Adverse Effects

Hypocalcemia

Citrate-related. Tingling, tetany. Treat with oral/IV calcium supplementation.

Coagulopathy

Depletion of coagulation factors with albumin replacement. Monitor PT/INR after procedures.

Allergic Reactions

Especially with FFP replacement. Urticaria, anaphylaxis possible. Pre-medicate in high-risk patients.

Key Indications

TTPCat I · 1A
GBSCat I · 1A
Myasthenia GravisCat I · 1B
Anti-GBM DiseaseCat I · 1B
CIDPCat I · 1B
ANCA VasculitisCat I · 1B
MS (Acute)Cat II · 2B
NMDA EncephalitisCat II · 2C
All TPE Indications →

Vascular Access

Large-bore central venous catheter (typically double-lumen) required for most procedures. Options: internal jugular, subclavian, or femoral vein. Arteriovenous fistula or peripheral veins sometimes adequate for scheduled procedures.

Red Blood Cell (RBC) Exchange

RBC exchange removes patient red blood cells and replaces them with donor RBCs. The primary application is sickle cell disease, where exchange rapidly reduces the percentage of hemoglobin S (HbS) while maintaining normal hematocrit — avoiding the iron overload associated with chronic simple transfusions.

Primary Indications

Sickle Cell Disease — Acute Stroke

Emergent exchange to reduce HbS to <30%, halting stroke progression. Category I, Grade 1C.

Sickle Cell Disease — Acute Chest Syndrome

Severe cases with O₂ saturation <90% or rapid decline. Improves pulmonary oxygenation. Category II.

Severe Babesiosis

Parasitemia >10% with organ involvement in asplenic or immunocompromised patients. Category II.

Severe Malaria (P. falciparum)

High parasitemia with cerebral malaria or multi-organ failure. Category III (limited RCT evidence).

Iron Overload Advantage: Unlike simple transfusion, RBC exchange maintains isovolemic conditions and avoids progressive iron accumulation. Essential for patients requiring chronic monthly transfusions for stroke prevention.

Protocol Targets

Acute Stroke TargetHbS < 30%
Chronic PreventionHbS < 30%
Babesiosis TargetParasitemia < 5%
Target Hematocrit28–33%

Extracorporeal Photopheresis (ECP)

FDA Approved for CTCL

ECP separates mononuclear cells (lymphocytes and monocytes) from whole blood, treats them extracorporeally with the photoactive compound 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) and UVA light, and reinfuses the treated cells. The photoinactivated cells trigger an immunomodulatory response rather than a destructive one, making ECP unique among immunotherapies: it modulates, rather than simply suppresses, the immune system.

Mechanism of Action

Photoinactivation

8-MOP + UVA cross-links malignant/alloreactive T-cell DNA, triggering apoptosis.

Dendritic Cell Activation

Apoptotic cells are phagocytosed by monocytes, which differentiate into tolerogenic DCs.

T-Regulatory Induction

Tolerogenic DCs shift immune balance toward Treg cells, suppressing pathogenic T-cell clones systemically.

FDA-Approved Indications

Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma (CTCL) — Erythrodermic stage. Only FDA-approved apheresis oncology indication.

ASFA-Supported (Non-FDA)

  • → Chronic GvHD (Cat I, 1B)
  • → Acute GvHD (Cat II)
  • → Cardiac transplant rejection (Cat II)
  • → Bronchiolitis obliterans (Cat II)

Standard Protocol

Frequency (initial)Monthly cycles
Days per cycle2 consecutive days
Min. duration6 months
Photosensitizer8-MOP
Light sourceUVA (320–400 nm)

LDL / Lipoprotein Apheresis

Category I · 1A for HoFH

Lipoprotein apheresis selectively removes atherogenic lipoproteins — primarily LDL-C and Lp(a) — from plasma. It is the most effective acute LDL-lowering intervention available, reducing LDL by 50–70% per session. For patients with familial hypercholesterolemia unresponsive to maximal drug therapy, it is life-saving.

Available Systems

Dextran Sulfate Adsorption

Dextran sulfate columns bind apoB-containing lipoproteins. High efficiency; most widely used system in the US.

DALI (Direct Adsorption)

Processes whole blood directly without plasma separation. More efficient; no replacement fluid required.

HELP (Heparin Precipitation)

Heparin-induced LDL precipitation at low pH. Removes LDL, Lp(a), and fibrinogen. Common in Europe.

Immunoadsorption (LDL-specific)

Antibody columns bind apoB-100 on LDL. Highly selective; allows plasma regeneration and reinfusion.

Clinical Outcomes

LDL reduction per session50–70%
Lp(a) reduction per session~60%
CV event reduction (long-term)Up to 70%

Frequency

Weekly (HoFH) or biweekly (HeFH) sessions. Each session takes 2–3 hours. Lifelong treatment typically required.

Immunoadsorption (IA)

Immunoadsorption passes patient plasma through a column containing a highly specific sorbent that binds immunoglobulins or specific antibody targets. Unlike TPE, IA removes antibodies without requiring replacement plasma, enabling processing of 2–3 plasma volumes per session with superior selectivity. The treated plasma is then returned to the patient.

Advantages over TPE

  • No replacement fluid required
  • Processes 2–3x more plasma
  • No coagulation factor depletion
  • No risk of FFP-related reactions
  • Higher antibody selectivity

Column Types

  • Protein A (Staphylococcal): Non-selective IgG removal
  • Anti-human IgG: Selective IgG depletion
  • ABO-specific: Blood group antibody removal
  • Anti-apoB (LDL-specific): Lipoprotein removal

Key Applications

ABO-Incompatible TransplantCat I
CIDPCat I
LDL ApheresisCat I
Renal AMRCat I

Leukocytapheresis

Selectively removes white blood cells from circulation. Primary indication is hyperleukocytosis in acute leukemia (WBC >100,000/µL), where circulating blast cells plug small vessels causing leukostasis — a medical emergency.

Emergency Indication: Leukostasis can cause respiratory failure and stroke. Each procedure reduces WBC by 30–50%. Bridge to chemotherapy — not a substitute.

Erythrocytapheresis

Selective removal of red blood cells, used therapeutically in polycythemia vera (reduce hematocrit) and hereditary hemochromatosis (reduce iron stores). More efficient than phlebotomy — removes more RBCs per session, requires fewer clinic visits.

Iron Removal (Hemochromatosis): Each erythrocytapheresis session removes ~200–250 mg of iron, compared to ~200–250 mg per phlebotomy — but in fewer total visits due to larger volume removal.

CAR-T Cell Leukapheresis (Cellular Therapy Collection)

Fastest-Growing Area

New Reference Standard (2025): AABB Apheresis: Principles and Practice, 4th Edition, Volume 3: Cellular Therapy (2025) is now the authoritative reference for this procedure. See the Guidelines & Reference Library for full details.

What Is CAR-T Cell Leukapheresis?

Leukapheresis for CAR-T cell manufacturing is a specialized apheresis procedure that collects autologous T-lymphocytes from a patient with hematologic malignancy. These cells are then genetically engineered ex vivo into chimeric antigen receptor T-cells (CAR-T) — a living drug that targets and destroys cancer cells. As of 2024, six FDA-approved CAR-T products exist, all requiring leukapheresis as the starting material.

Unlike traditional therapeutic apheresis (which removes a pathogenic substance), CAR-T leukapheresis collects a therapeutic product. The apheresis nurse's role is to obtain a sufficient yield of viable T-lymphocytes to enable successful manufacturing.

FDA-Approved CAR-T Products (2024)
Kymriahtisagenlecleucel
Yescartaaxicabtagene ciloleucel
Tecartusbrexucabtagene autoleucel
Breyanzilisocabtagene maraleucel
Abecmaidecabtagene vicleucel
Carvykticiltacabtagene autoleucel

Collection Protocol

Target Cell Yield

≥1×10&sup9; CD3+ T-cells per collection (product-specific). Verify with manufacturer specifications for each CAR-T product.

Blood Volume Processed

10–15 liters total blood volume. Inlet flow rate 50–70 mL/min. Typically 1–2 sessions.

Anticoagulation

ACD-A (acid citrate dextrose). Standard inlet:ACD ratio 10:1 to 12:1. Adjust for patient tolerance.

Vascular Access

Large-bore peripheral IV (preferred), apheresis catheter, or Hickman/PICC. Minimum flow rate 30–40 mL/min required.

Post-Collection Handling

Immediate cryopreservation in GMP-grade media. Chain-of-custody documentation required. Shipped to manufacturer within 24–48 hours.

Timing Considerations

Collect during remission or low disease burden. Avoid G-CSF pre-collection. Avoid steroids >20mg/day prednisone equivalent.

Critical Quality Metrics

ParameterMinimum ThresholdClinical Significance
CD3+ T-cell count≥1×10&sup9; totalMinimum for manufacturing. Below threshold may require repeat collection.
Cell viability≥70%Low viability causes manufacturing failure. Avoid collections during active infection.
Monocyte contamination<20%Excess monocytes inhibit T-cell expansion during manufacturing.
Collection efficiency≥50%Percentage of target cells collected vs. processed. Reflects machine performance and patient factors.
Lymphopenia Challenge

Patients with lymphopenia from prior chemotherapy may have inadequate T-cell counts. Options: multiple collection sessions, G-CSF/plerixafor mobilization, or lymphodepletion-free bridging strategies.

Regulatory Framework

FDA 21 CFR Part 1271 (HCT/P regulations), AABB Cellular Therapy Standards 8th Ed. (2024), FACT-JACIE accreditation. Chain-of-custody documentation is mandatory from collection through infusion.

Full CAR-T Apheresis Reference Page →

Double Filtration Plasmapheresis (DFPP)

DFPP uses a two-step membrane filtration process. The first membrane separates plasma from blood cells. The separated plasma then passes through a second membrane with smaller pores that selectively retains large molecular weight substances (immunoglobulins, lipoproteins, cryoglobulins) while allowing smaller proteins (albumin, clotting factors) to pass back to the patient. This selectivity reduces the need for large volumes of replacement fluid compared to standard TPE.

Step 1 — Plasma Separation

Hollow-fiber membrane separates plasma from cellular blood components.

Step 2 — Cascade Filtration

Second membrane retains large MW substances; smaller proteins returned to patient.

Advantage

Removes pathogenic large molecules while preserving albumin and smaller proteins. Less replacement fluid needed.

References & Source Citations

All procedure protocols, dosing parameters, and technical specifications are derived from the following directly accessed sources. All citations verified February 2026.

  1. Connelly-Smith L, Alquist CR, Aqui NA, Hofmann JC, Klingel R, Onwuemene OA, et al. Guidelines on the Use of Therapeutic Apheresis in Clinical Practice — Evidence-Based Approach from the Writing Committee of the American Society for Apheresis: The Ninth Special Issue. J Clin Apher. 2023;38(2):77–278. doi:10.1002/jca.22043PubMed 37017433Free Full Text (Wiley)Primary source for all ASFA category and grade assignments, procedure indications, replacement fluid protocols, and treatment frequency recommendations.
  2. McLeod BC, Szczepiorkowski ZM, Weinstein R, Winters JL, editors. Apheresis: Principles and Practice, 3rd Edition. Bethesda, MD: AABB Press; 2010. ISBN: 978-1-56395-305-7. — Primary reference for centrifugal separation technology, membrane filtration principles, machine-specific protocols, anticoagulation systems, and vascular access. Directly accessed.
  3. Schwartz J, Padmanabhan A, Aqui N, Balogun RA, Connelly-Smith L, Delaney M, Dunbar NM, Witt V, Wu Y, Shaz BH. Guidelines on the Use of Therapeutic Apheresis in Clinical Practice — Evidence-Based Approach from the Writing Committee of the American Society for Apheresis: The Seventh Special Issue. J Clin Apher. 2016;31(3):149–338. doi:10.1002/jca.21470PubMed 27322218Free Full Text (Wiley)ASFA 7th Edition (2016); source for citrate anticoagulation protocols and historical procedure comparisons.
  4. American Society for Apheresis. Neurological Disease Indications for Plasma Exchange [Practitioner Fact Sheet]. ASFA Practitioner Series. Available at: apheresis.orgFree — ASFA Official DocumentSource for neurological TPE dosing, replacement fluid protocols, and Nadler’s formula for plasma volume calculation.

See Also

Clinical Calculators — TPE Volume, ECV, TBV ASFA Guidelines — Evidence Categories & Grades Technology & Devices — Centrifugal vs Membrane Disease Library — All 106 Indications