"Type O" redirects here. It is not to be confused with type 0.
A blood type (also called a blood group) is a classification of blood based on the presence and absence of antibodies and also based on the presence or absence of inherited antigenic substances on the surface of red blood cells (RBCs). These antigens may be proteins, carbohydrates, glycoproteins, or glycolipids, depending on the blood group system. Some of these antigens are also present on the surface of other types of cells of various tissues. Several of these red blood cell surface antigens can stem from one allele (or an alternative version of a gene) and collectively form a blood group system.[1] Blood types are inherited and represent contributions from both parents. A total of 36 human blood group systems are now recognized by the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT).[2] The two most important ones are ABO and the Rh blood group systems; they determine someone's blood type (A, B, AB and O, with +, or null denoting RhD status) for suitability in blood transfusion.
A complete blood type would describe a full set of 30 substances on the surface of red blood cells, and an individual's blood type is one of many possible combinations of blood-group antigens.[3] Across the 36 blood groups, over 340 different blood-group antigens have been found.[2] Almost always, an individual has the same blood group for life, but very rarely an individual's blood type changes through addition or suppression of an antigen in infection, malignancy, or autoimmune disease.[4][5][6][7] Another more common cause in blood type change is a bone marrow transplant. Bone-marrow transplants are performed for many leukemias and lymphomas, among other diseases. If a person receives bone marrow from someone who is a different ABO type (e.g., a type A patient receives a type O bone marrow), the patient's blood type will eventually convert to the donor's type.
Some blood types are associated with inheritance of other diseases; for example, the Kell antigen is sometimes associated with McLeod syndrome.[8] Certain blood types may affect susceptibility to infections, an example being the resistance to specific malaria species seen in individuals lacking the Duffy antigen.[9] The Duffy antigen, presumably as a result of natural selection, is less common in ethnic groups from areas with a high incidence of malaria.[10]
The ABO blood group system involves two antigens and two antibodies found in human blood. The two antigens are antigen A and antigen B. The two antibodies are antibody A and antibody B. The antigens are present on the red blood cells and the antibodies in the serum. Regarding the antigen property of the blood all human beings can be classified into 4 groups, those with antigen A (group A), those with antigen B (group B), those with both antigen A and B (group AB) and those with neither antigen (group O). The antibodies present together with the antigens are found as follows:
1. Antigen A with antibody B2. Antigen B with antibody A3. Antigen AB has no antibodies4. Antigen nil (group O) with antibody A and B.
There is an agglutination reaction between similar antigen and antibody (for example, antigen A agglutinates the antibody A and antigen B agglutinates the antibody B). Thus, transfusion can be considered safe as long as the serum of the recipient does not contain antibodies for the blood cell antigens of the donor.
The ABO system is the most important blood-group system in human-blood transfusion. The associated anti-A and anti-B antibodies are usually immunoglobulin M, abbreviated IgM, antibodies. ABO IgM antibodies are produced in the first years of life by sensitization to environmental substances such as food, bacteria, and viruses.[citation needed] The original terminology used by Karl Landsteiner in 1901 for the classification was A/B/C; in later publications "C" became "O".[11] "O" is often called 0 (zero, or null) in other languages.[11][12]
The Rh system (Rh meaning Rhesus) is the second most significant blood-group system in human-blood transfusion with currently 50 antigens. The most significant Rh antigen is the D antigen, because it is the most likely to provoke an immune system response of the five main Rh antigens. It is common for D-negative individuals not to have any anti-D IgG or IgM antibodies, because anti-D antibodies are not usually produced by sensitization against environmental substances. However, D-negative individuals can produce IgG anti-D antibodies following a sensitizing event: possibly a fetomaternal transfusion of blood from a fetus in pregnancy or occasionally a blood transfusion with D positive RBCs.[13] Rh disease can develop in these cases.[14] Rh negative blood types are much less common in Asian populations (0.3%) than they are in European populations (15%).[15] The presence or absence of the Rh(D) antigen is signified by the + or sign, so that, for example, the A group is ABO type A and does not have the Rh (D) antigen.
As with many other genetic traits, the distribution of ABO and Rh blood groups varies significantly between populations.
Thirty-three blood-group systems have been identified by the International Society for Blood Transfusion in addition to the common ABO and Rh systems.[16] Thus, in addition to the ABO antigens and Rh antigens, many other antigens are expressed on the RBC surface membrane. For example, an individual can be AB, D positive, and at the same time M and N positive (MNS system), K positive (Kell system), Lea or Leb negative (Lewis system), and so on, being positive or negative for each blood group system antigen. Many of the blood group systems were named after the patients in whom the corresponding antibodies were initially encountered.
Transfusion medicine is a specialized branch of hematology that is concerned with the study of blood groups, along with the work of a blood bank to provide a transfusion service for blood and other blood products. Across the world, blood products must be prescribed by a medical doctor (licensed physician or surgeon) in a similar way as medicines.
Much of the routine work of a blood bank involves testing blood from both donors and recipients to ensure that every individual recipient is given blood that is compatible and is as safe as possible. If a unit of incompatible blood is transfused between a donor and recipient, a severe acute hemolytic reaction with hemolysis (RBC destruction), renal failure and shock is likely to occur, and death is a possibility. Antibodies can be highly active and can attack RBCs and bind components of the complement system to cause massive hemolysis of the transfused blood.
Patients should ideally receive their own blood or type-specific blood products to minimize the chance of a transfusion reaction. Risks can be further reduced by cross-matching blood, but this may be skipped when blood is required for an emergency. Cross-matching involves mixing a sample of the recipient's serum with a sample of the donor's red blood cells and checking if the mixture agglutinates, or forms clumps. If agglutination is not obvious by direct vision, blood bank technicians usually check for agglutination with a microscope. If agglutination occurs, that particular donor's blood cannot be transfused to that particular recipient. In a blood bank it is vital that all blood specimens are correctly identified, so labelling has been standardized using a barcode system known as ISBT 128.
The blood group may be included on identification tags or on tattoos worn by military personnel, in case they should need an emergency blood transfusion. Frontline German Waffen-SS had blood group tattoos during World War II.
Rare blood types can cause supply problems for blood banks and hospitals. For example, Duffy-negative blood occurs much more frequently in people of African origin,[19] and the rarity of this blood type in the rest of the population can result in a shortage of Duffy-negative blood for these patients. Similarly for RhD negative people, there is a risk associated with travelling to parts of the world where supplies of RhD negative blood are rare, particularly East Asia, where blood services may endeavor to encourage Westerners to donate blood.[20]
Pregnant women may carry a fetus with a blood type which is different from their own. In those cases, the mother can make IgG blood group antibodies. This can happen if some of the fetus' blood cells pass into the mother's blood circulation (e.g. a small fetomaternal hemorrhage at the time of childbirth or obstetric intervention), or sometimes after a therapeutic blood transfusion. This can cause Rh disease or other forms of hemolytic disease of the newborn (HDN) in the current pregnancy and/or subsequent pregnancies. Sometimes this is lethal for the fetus; in these cases it is called hydrops fetalis.[21] If a pregnant woman is known to have anti-D antibodies, the Rh blood type of a fetus can be tested by analysis of fetal DNA in maternal plasma to assess the risk to the fetus of Rh disease.[22] One of the major advances of twentieth century medicine was to prevent this disease by stopping the formation of Anti-D antibodies by D negative mothers with an injectable medication called Rho(D) immune globulin.[23][24] Antibodies associated with some blood groups can cause severe HDN, others can only cause mild HDN and others are not known to cause HDN.[21]
To provide maximum benefit from each blood donation and to extend shelf-life, blood banks fractionate some whole blood into several products. The most common of these products are packed RBCs, plasma, platelets, cryoprecipitate, and fresh frozen plasma (FFP). FFP is quick-frozen to retain the labile clotting factors V and VIII, which are usually administered to patients who have a potentially fatal clotting problem caused by a condition such as advanced liver disease, overdose of anticoagulant, or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC).
Units of packed red cells are made by removing as much of the plasma as possible from whole blood units.
Clotting factors synthesized by modern recombinant methods are now in routine clinical use for hemophilia, as the risks of infection transmission that occur with pooled blood products are avoided.
Table note1. Assumes absence of atypical antibodies that would cause an incompatibility between donor and recipient blood, as is usual for blood selected by cross matching.
An Rh D-negative patient who does not have any anti-D antibodies (never being previously sensitized to D-positive RBCs) can receive a transfusion of D-positive blood once, but this would cause sensitization to the D antigen, and a female patient would become at risk for hemolytic disease of the newborn. If a D-negative patient has developed anti-D antibodies, a subsequent exposure to D-positive blood would lead to a potentially dangerous transfusion reaction. Rh D-positive blood should never be given to D-negative women of child bearing age or to patients with D antibodies, so blood banks must conserve Rh-negative blood for these patients. In extreme circumstances, such as for a major bleed when stocks of D-negative blood units are very low at the blood bank, D-positive blood might be given to D-negative females above child-bearing age or to Rh-negative males, providing that they did not have anti-D antibodies, to conserve D-negative blood stock in the blood bank. The converse is not true; Rh D-positive patients do not react to D negative blood.
This same matching is done for other antigens of the Rh system as C, c, E and e and for other blood group systems with a known risk for immunization such as the Kell system in particular for females of child-bearing age or patients with known need for many transfusions.
Blood plasma compatibility is the inverse of red blood cell compatibility.[28] Type AB plasma carries neither anti-A nor anti-B antibodies and can be transfused to individuals of any blood group; but type AB patients can only receive type AB plasma. Type O carries both antibodies, so individuals of blood group O can receive plasma from any blood group, but type O plasma can be used only by type O recipients.
Table note1. Assumes absence of strong atypical antibodies in donor plasma
Rh D antibodies are uncommon, so generally neither D negative nor D positive blood contain anti-D antibodies. If a potential donor is found to have anti-D antibodies or any strong atypical blood group antibody by antibody screening in the blood bank, they would not be accepted as a donor (or in some blood banks the blood would be drawn but the product would need to be appropriately labeled); therefore, donor blood plasma issued by a blood bank can be selected to be free of D antibodies and free of other atypical antibodies, and such donor plasma issued from a blood bank would be suitable for a recipient who may be D positive or D negative, as long as blood plasma and the recipient are ABO compatible.[citation needed]
In transfusions of packed red blood cells, individuals with type O Rh D negative blood are often called universal donors. Those with type AB Rh D positive blood are called universal recipients. However, these terms are only generally true with respect to possible reactions of the recipient's anti-A and anti-B antibodies to transfused red blood cells, and also possible sensitization to Rh D antigens. One exception is individuals with hh antigen system (also known as the Bombay phenotype) who can only receive blood safely from other hh donors, because they form antibodies against the H antigen present on all red blood cells.[29][30]
Blood donors with exceptionally strong anti-A, anti-B or any atypical blood group antibody may be excluded from blood donation. In general, while the plasma fraction of a blood transfusion may carry donor antibodies not found in the recipient, a significant reaction is unlikely because of dilution.
Additionally, red blood cell surface antigens other than A, B and Rh D, might cause adverse reactions and sensitization, if they can bind to the corresponding antibodies to generate an immune response. Transfusions are further complicated because platelets and white blood cells (WBCs) have their own systems of surface antigens, and sensitization to platelet or WBC antigens can occur as a result of transfusion.
For transfusions of plasma, this situation is reversed. Type O plasma, containing both anti-A and anti-B antibodies, can only be given to O recipients. The antibodies will attack the antigens on any other blood type. Conversely, AB plasma can be given to patients of any ABO blood group, because it does not contain any anti-A or anti-B antibodies.
Typically, blood type tests are performed through addition of a blood sample to a solution containing antibodies corresponding to each antigen. The presence of an antigen on the surface of the blood cells is indicated by agglutination. An alternative system for blood type determination involving no antibodies was developed in 2017 at Imperial College London which makes use of paramagnetic molecularly imprinted polymer nanoparticles with affinity for specific blood antigens.[31] In these tests, rather than agglutination, a positive result is indicated by decolorization as red blood cells which bind to the nanoparticles are pulled toward a magnet and removed from solution.
In addition to the current practice of serologic testing of blood types, the progress in molecular diagnostics allows the increasing use of blood group genotyping. In contrast to serologic tests reporting a direct blood type phenotype, genotyping allows the prediction of a phenotype based on the knowledge of the molecular basis of the currently known antigens. This allows a more detailed determination of the blood type and therefore a better match for transfusion, which can be crucial in particular for patients with needs for many transfusions to prevent allo-immunization.[32][33]
Blood types were first discovered by an Austrian Physician Karl Landsteiner working at the Pathological-Anatomical Institute of the University of Vienna (now Medical University of Vienna). In 1900, he found that blood sera from different persons would clump together (agglutinate) when mixed in test tubes, and not only that some human blood also agglutinated with animal blood.[34] He wrote a two-sentence footnote:
The serum of healthy human beings not only agglutinates animal red cells, but also often those of human origin, from other individuals. It remains to be seen whether this appearance is related to inborn differences between individuals or it is the result of some damage of bacterial kind.[35]
This was the first evidence that blood variation exists in humans. The next year, in 1901, he made a definitive observation that blood serum of an individual would agglutinate with only those of certain individuals. Based on this he classified human bloods into three groups, namely group A, group B, and group C. He defined that group A blood agglutinates with group B, but never with its own type. Similarly, group B blood agglutinates with group A. Group C blood is different in that it agglutinates with both A and B.[36] This was the discovery of blood groups for which Landsteiner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1930. (C was later renamed to O after the German Ohne, meaning without, or zero, or null.[37]) The group AB was discovered a year later by Landsteiner's students Adriano Sturli, and Alfred von Decastello.[38][39]
In 1927, Landsteiner, with Philip Levine, discovered the MN blood group system,[40] and the P system.[41] Development of the Coombs test in 1945,[42] the advent of transfusion medicine, and the understanding of ABO hemolytic disease of the newborn led to discovery of more blood groups. As of 2018, the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT) recognizes 346 blood group antigens which are assigned to 36 blood groups.[2]
A popular belief in Japan is that a person's ABO blood type is predictive of their personality, character, and compatibility with others. This belief is also widespread in South Korea[43] and Taiwan. The theory reached Japan in a 1927 psychologist's report, and the government of the time commissioned a study aimed at breeding better soldiers.[43] Interest in the theory faded in the 1930s. Ultimately, the discovery of DNA in the following decades indicated that DNA instead had an important role in both heredity generally and personality specifically. Interest in the theory was revived in the 1970s by Masahiko Nomi, a broadcaster with a background in law rather than science.[43] The theory is widely accepted in Japanese and South Korean popular culture.[44]
Originally posted here:
Blood type - Wikipedia
- BIORESTORATIVE THERAPIES, INC. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS. (form 10-K) - Marketscreener.com - March 29th, 2023
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell for the Study and Treatment of ... - Hindawi - December 3rd, 2022
- What Happens When Everyone Realises We Can Live Much Longer? We May Find Out As Soon As 2025 - Forbes - December 3rd, 2022
- INTERNATIONAL STEM CELL CORP Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (form 10-Q) - Marketscreener.com - November 17th, 2022
- 3D Cell Culture Market stands at revenue of US$ 1.15 Bn in 2022, and is predicted to surge at a CAGR of 9.8% to hit worth of US$ 2.67 Bn during... - November 17th, 2022
- YUBO INTERNATIONAL BIOTECH LTD Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations. (form 10-Q) - Marketscreener.com - November 17th, 2022
- ACTINIUM PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATION (form 10-Q) - Marketscreener.com - November 17th, 2022
- Top 10 Best Stem Cell Supplement Brands - Healthtrends - June 26th, 2022
- How Does Stem Cell Therapy Work and What Are the Risks? | ISCRM - June 26th, 2022
- Stem Cell Wellness Kit - June 26th, 2022
- Kangstem Biotech withdraws trial application for stem cell-based osteoarthritis treatment - KBR - June 26th, 2022
- Global Human Embryonic Stem Cell Market to be Driven by the Rapid Technological Advancements in the Forecast Period of 2022-2027 Designer Women -... - June 26th, 2022
- Sana Biotechnology Announces Multiple Preclinical Data Presentations to Showcase Its Hypoimmune Platform, Including in Type 1 Diabetes, at the... - June 26th, 2022
- Efficient terminal erythroid differentiation requires the APC/C cofactor Cdh1 to limit replicative stress in erythroblasts | Scientific Reports -... - June 26th, 2022
- Propanc Biopharma's CSO Hails Dostarlimab's Impressive Results Whilst Acknowledging More Work to Be Done in the Fight Against Cancer - Business Wire - June 26th, 2022
- Precision BioSciences Announces In Vivo Gene Editing Collaboration with Novartis to Develop Potentially Curative Treatment for Disorders Including... - June 26th, 2022
- 10 Years of Immunotherapy: Advances, Innovations, and Better Patient Outcomes - Targeted Oncology - June 26th, 2022
- Embryonic Stem Cell Research: An Ethical Dilemma - January 30th, 2022
- Skeletal Muscle Cell Induction from Pluripotent Stem Cells - January 30th, 2022
- mRNA COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness in the Immunocompromised - Medscape - January 30th, 2022
- MaaT Pharma Announces Positive Interim Engraftment Data for Oral Formulation MaaT033 Allowing Early Termination of Phase 1b CIMON Study - Business... - January 30th, 2022
- European Commission Approves Merck's KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) as Adjuvant Therapy for Certain Patients With Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) Following... - January 30th, 2022
- Targeted Therapy Innovator Foresees New Paradigms in Breast Cancer - OncLive - January 30th, 2022
- Global Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC) Market Growing Demand, Future Trends, Competitive Regions and Forecast 2021 to 2027 The Oxford Spokesman - The... - January 30th, 2022
- Adipose derived mesenchymal stem cell secretome formulation as a biotherapeutic to inhibit growth of drug resistant triple negative breast cancer |... - December 8th, 2021
- All at-risk TN-bound travellers test Covid negative - The New Indian Express - December 8th, 2021
- Good Stocks To Invest In Right Now? 4 Health Care Stocks To Check Out - FW Business - December 8th, 2021
- Pandemic lockdown declined emotional well-being for adults with hearing, vision loss: Study - ETHealthworld.com - December 8th, 2021
- Impact of microbial contamination of haematopoietic stem cells on post-transplant outcomes: A retrospective study from tertiary care centre in India -... - August 17th, 2021
- Longeveron: Time to Buy the Di - GuruFocus.com - August 17th, 2021
- The latest on the Covid-19 pandemic in the US: Live updates - CNN - August 17th, 2021
- How this Holocaust refugee beat Covid-19 against all odds J. - The Jewish News of Northern California - August 17th, 2021
- Trade-offs among transport, support, and storage in xylem from shrubs in a semiarid chaparral environment tested with structural equation modeling -... - August 17th, 2021
- Oklahoma 10-year-old in remission after being diagnosed with rare form of leukemia 2 years ago - KFOR Oklahoma City - July 21st, 2021
- Covid: There's a serious problem with how we are testing people for the virus Neale Hanvey MP - The Scotsman - July 21st, 2021
- Profilin 1 Protein and Its Implications for Cancers - Cancer Network - July 21st, 2021
- Homing Technology Delivers Therapy to Cancerous Bone - The Scientist - July 21st, 2021
- Developmental Interest in Allogeneic PlacentaDerived Cell Therapies Expands - OncLive - July 21st, 2021
- Triple negative breast cancer and non-small cell lung cancer: Clinical challenges and nano-formulation approaches - DocWire News - July 21st, 2021
- The World's First Lab-Grown Foie Gras Could Solve This Major Concern - Mashed - July 21st, 2021
- KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) Plus Chemotherapy Before Surgery and Continued as a Single Agent After Surgery Showed Statistically Significant Event-Free... - July 21st, 2021
- Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells (hMSC) Market Size 2021 | Global Trends, Business Overview, Challenges, Opportunities and Forecast to 2027 The Bisouv... - March 3rd, 2021
- [Full text] An Update on the Molecular Pathology of Metaplastic Breast Cancer | BCTT - Dove Medical Press - March 3rd, 2021
- 4D Pharma Appointments Paul Maier to the Board as Non-Executive Director - Business Wire - March 3rd, 2021
- Investigative Interventions Gain Ground in GVHD - OncLive - March 3rd, 2021
- Combination Regimens for Multiple Myeloma Show Efficacy in the Transplant-Ineligible Population, According to Dingli - Targeted Oncology - March 3rd, 2021
- Martin Makes Sense of the Rapidly Evolving MCL Treatment Paradigm - OncLive - March 3rd, 2021
- Hoth Therapeutics Expands License Agreement to Include Innovative Cancer and Anaphylactic Treatment - BioSpace - March 3rd, 2021
- Health Matters; Inflammation with Dr. Baumgartner [PODCAST] - WJON News - February 14th, 2021
- G1 Therapeutics gains first FDA nod with myelopreservation therapy Cosela | 2021-02-12 - BioWorld Online - February 14th, 2021
- Kris Gopalakrishnan on innovation - Fortune India - February 14th, 2021
- Change is coming, and at an ever-accelerating pace - Al Jazeera English - January 12th, 2021
- MCL Landscape Adapts to Changes After CAR T-Cell Therapy Approval - OncLive - January 9th, 2021
- 5 questions facing gene therapy in 2021 - BioPharma Dive - January 9th, 2021
- RNA molecules are masters of their own destiny - MIT News - January 9th, 2021
- Global Platelet Rich Plasma and Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Industry Analysis and Forecast (2019-2026): By indication type, treatment type,... - January 9th, 2021
- Harpoon Therapeutics : Clin Cancer Res 2021; OnlineFirst version Jan 6, 2021 - Marketscreener.com - January 9th, 2021
- Synthetic lethality across normal tissues is strongly associated with cancer risk, onset, and tumor suppressor specificity - Science Advances - January 5th, 2021
- Versiti Blood Centers and Noodles & Company Serve Up Thanks to Blood Donors - PRNewswire - January 5th, 2021
- January 2021: 2020 Papers of the Year - Environmental Factor Newsletter - January 5th, 2021
- Ozone in the air is bad for birds - Massive Science - January 5th, 2021
- How good are the COVID-19 vaccines? - Massive Science - January 5th, 2021
- Stem cells from cord blood can now be used across many conditions: Mayur Abhaya, MD & CEO, LifeCell Internat.. - ETHealthworld.com - December 28th, 2020
- Allogeneic SCT Benefits Children and Adolescents With Relapsed Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma - OncLive - December 28th, 2020
- CalvinAyre.com's most read life stories of 2020 - CalvinAyre.com - December 28th, 2020
- Coronavirus | Over 6,000 travellers from U.K. traced across States - The Hindu - December 28th, 2020
- Exosomes act as messengers and decoys to save healthy cells from viral infection - Massive Science - December 28th, 2020
- Celtics adjust to two-game series designed to reduce team travel - The Boston Globe - December 28th, 2020
- Experts Reflect on Most Impactful FDA Moves of 2020 in Solid Tumors, Hematologic Malignancies - Targeted Oncology - December 28th, 2020
- FDA Resumes eIND Approval for Severe-to-Critical COVID-19 Patients Use of Vyrologix (leronlimab) Following Full Enrollment in CytoDyn's Phase 3 Trial... - December 28th, 2020
- Magenta Therapeutics Announces Commencement of First Phase 2 Clinical Trial of MGTA-145 for Stem Cell Mobilization, Oral Presentation of MGTA-145... - December 12th, 2020
- Daratumumab Regimen Shows Promise in Transplant-Eligible Patients With Newly Diagnosed Myeloma - Targeted Oncology - December 12th, 2020
- HSCT Found Potentially Curative for Some T-Cell Lymphoma Patients - Cancer Therapy Advisor - December 12th, 2020
- Researchers Trace the Origin of Blood Cancer to Early Childhood, Decades before Diagnosis - Yahoo Finance - December 12th, 2020
- ALLO-715, Off-the-Shelf CAR T-Cell Therapy, Produces Early Promise in Multiple Myeloma - Cancer Network - December 12th, 2020
- BeiGene Announces the Approval in China of BLINCYTO (Blinatumomab) for Injection for Adult Patients with Relapsed or Refractory B-Cell Precursor Acute... - December 12th, 2020
- Flintshire youngster goes the extra mile to raise funds for Lymphoma Action | The Leader - LeaderLive - December 12th, 2020
- Meat-Tech Agrees to Acquire Cultured Fat Pioneer 'Peace of Meat' - PRNewswire - December 12th, 2020
- Stem Cell Manufacturing Market Size, Overview with Detailed Analysis, Competitive landscape, Forecast to 2027 - Cheshire Media - December 12th, 2020
- Rocket Pharmaceuticals Presents Positive Clinical Data from its Fanconi Anemia and Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency-I Programs at the 62nd American... - December 12th, 2020