National Donor Deferral Registry
The National Donor Deferral Registry, also known as the is a database of individuals who have tested "reactive" for viral agents like human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV), Hepatitis B virus (HBV), and hepatitis C virus (HCV) and are permanently prohibited from donating plasma. NDDR is a registered trademark of the Plasma Protein Therapeutics Association. U.S. regulations require organizations that collect plasma screens for viruses and flag donors and keep a list. The NDDR was established in 1993. This is to help plasma donation centers notify other centers of a donor who has tested positive for one of the listed viruses. The NDDR is temporary
Government Regulations
The NDDR is a confidential database that is used in North America and the United States to help provide the collection of safe plasma donation through plasmapheresis. When identifying information is matched in the registry, the donation center should not accept a person donation. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration lists the requirements for donor federal in 21 CFR § 610.41In November 2020, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration reviewed a Section 510 premarket notification of a cloud-based version of the NDDR by Headspring Healthcare, Inc.
The new web-based systems would allow
- Allow blood and plasma collection facilities to retrieve recent dates of a donor's donations of blood or blood components via the web, or through an electronic interface, for the purpose of determining if the frequency of an individual's donations is in compliance with Plasma Protein Therapeutics Association's standards and applicable regulatory requirements
- Allow blood and plasma collection facilities to retrieve basic underlying information about a donor to aid and assist in the determination of a donor's eligibility to donate blood or plasma.
- Allow donor deferral information to be added, updated and deleted via a web page.
The personally identifiable information that is collected is "individual's donor ID, first and last name, middle initial birthdate and gender. The donor's social security number or INDS number."
Requalification of previously deferred donors
The FDA has established rules under how a previously deferred donor may be able to requalify. There are two methods which the FDA has adopted.- The previous deferral was for a defined period of time and that time period has passed, or the deferral was otherwise temporary, such as a deferral based on eligibility criteria
- A deferred donor subsequently may be found to be eligible as a donor of blood or blood components by a requalification method or process found acceptable for such purposes by FDA. Such a donor is considered no longer deferred.
Errors on registry
There is no central agency responsible for reviewing or correcting errors. Each company that inputs data into the NDDR must have a written procedure to correct errors.A Woman in Des Moines, Iowa, was listed on the NDDR after having a 'reactive' test for HIV however, after additional testing was found to be negative for HIV.