The Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine Fellowship is designed to develop in-depth skills in all aspects of transfusion medicine. The graduate will be qualified to act as medical director in any blood banking/transfusion medicine setting, from a large and diversified transfusion service in an academic medical center to a community blood bank.

History

The Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine Fellowship received initial accreditation by the American Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) on June 12, 1979.

Curriculum

Fellows receive training in all facets of modern transfusion medicine, including serological evaluations, patient blood management, transfusion practices, therapeutic apheresis, peripheral blood stem cell collection and cryopreservation, blood collection, donor infectious disease testing, coagulation work-ups, and HLA. Direct patient care is emphasized through daily transfusion medicine rounds. Fellows consult on difficult transfusion workups, investigate transfusion reactions and manage stem cell collections and therapeutic apheresis procedures.

Approximately 80,000 units of blood and components are transfused annually at Barnes Jewish Hospital. The transfusion service collaborates closely with clinical teams, supporting patients with sickle cell disease, trauma, and recipients of solid organ and bone marrow/stem cell transplants. Experience in blood center operation comes from visits to the regional blood center and didactics provided by their medical director. Fellows become familiar with blood processing into individual components, as well as various aspects of blood preservation and long-term storage. They develop skills in the administrative management of the blood bank, including personnel issues, developing standard operating procedures and quality control, improvement and assurance. Fellows participate actively in teaching at all levels including laboratory technicians, medical students and residents.

An important aspect of the clinical training program is supervised clinical or laboratory research. Fellows conduct a relevant literature review, prepare a research proposal and collect data, ultimately preparing a report for presentation and possible publication.

Facilities

The blood bank of Barnes-Jewish Hospital provides the basic setting for the educational training. In addition, the fellow rotates through St. Louis Children’s Hospital to gain expertise in pediatric transfusion medicine. There are seven faculty members dedicated to training all aspects of transfusion medicine. The overall transfusion medicine space includes areas devoted to compatibility testing, component processing, a reference laboratory, cryopreservation laboratory, and a records/administration area.

The Apheresis Center located in the Center for Advanced Medicine adjacent to the Barnes-Jewish Hospital provides experience in therapeutic and blood stem cell collections in outpatient and inpatient settings. The unit has several apheresis machines, and collects peripheral blood stem cell (autologous and allogeneic), and performs therapeutic apheresis, including extracorporal photopheresis, on outpatients and inpatients. These procedures are under the medical supervision of trainees, nurse practitioners and transfusion medicine faculty.

Additional space and facilities are available through the Division of Laboratory and Genomic Medicine, which provides office space for fellows, multiple teaching classrooms, audiovisual equipment and a specialized clinical pathology medical library in the trainee office area.

Requirements

Applicants for Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine Fellowship must meet the requirements for medical licensure in Missouri and have successfully completed training in an ACGME-approved residency in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology or Clinical Pathology or other specialty deemed eligible for certification in Blood Banking/Transfusion Medicine by the American Board of Pathology.

Application

Applications for the 2026-2027 academic year will be available July 1, 2024. Please apply at fellowships.path.wustl.edu.

Address Letters of Recommendation to:
Suzanne R. Thibodeaux, MD, PhD
Program Director, Blood Banking & Transfusion Medicine Fellowship
Washington University School of Medicine
425 South Euclid Avenue, MSC 8118–004-04
St. Louis, MO 63110
srthibodeaux@wustl.edu

For general questions, contact Naomi Burr burr@wustl.edu.

Faculty and trainees

Faculty

Christine Fuja, DO

Christine Fuja, DO

Assistant Professor, Division of Laboratory and Genomic Medicine

Chang Liu, MD, PhD

Chang Liu, MD, PhD

Associate Professor, Pathology & Immunology
Section Head, Blood Bank/Apheresis/CTL/HLA
Director, Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Fellowship

Division: Laboratory & Genomic Medicine

Nathan McLamb, MD

Nathan McLamb, MD

Assistant Professor, Pathology and Immunology

Division: Laboratory and Genomic Medicine

Office of Faculty Development Representative

 

Suzanne R.  Thibodeaux, MD, PhD

Suzanne R. Thibodeaux, MD, PhD

Associate Professor, Pathology & Immunology
Section Head, Transfusion Medicine/HLA

Division: Laboratory & Genomic Medicine

Trainees

Lisa Wallace, DO

Lisa Wallace, DO

Fellow, Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia PA


Contact information

Naomi Burr
Fellowship Program Coordinator
Phone: 314-362-3938
burr@wustl.edu