In TRALI, first-hit risk factors include long-term excessive alcohol use, shock, liver surgery, current smoking, higher peak airway pressure while undergoing mechanical ventilation, positive intravascular fluid balance, low levels of
interleukin-10, and systemic
inflammation. Systemic inflammation may be reflected in the plasma cytokine profiles but also via increased levels of
C-reactive protein (CRP), an
acute-phase protein that rapidly increases during acute infections and inflammation and is widely used clinically as a
biomarker of inflammation. CRP has been shown to be elevated in TRALI patients and, in a mouse
model, to functionally enable the first hit in the development of TRALI by increasing the accumulation in the lungs of a neutrophil
homologous to
interleukin-8. Another factor that can predispose patients to TRALI is pre-existing lung injury, which causes white blood cells to localize in the lungs' blood vessels. The second hit in TRALI may be conveyed by anti-leukocyte antibodies or other factors present in the transfusion product. In approximately 80% of cases, anti-HLA class I or II or anti-HNA antibodies are implicated as involved in triggering TRALI, although that figure may be even higher depending on the detection methods used. In the remaining 20% of TRALI cases, non–antibody factors or biological response modifiers are suggested to contribute the second hit, and these may possibly include lipid mediators,
extracellular vesicles, and aged blood cells. ==Diagnosis==