| Literature DB >> 27487075 |
Luciana Teofili1, Caterina Giovanna Valentini1, Roberta Di Blasi1, Nicoletta Orlando1, Luana Fianchi1, Gina Zini1, Simona Sica1, Valerio De Stefano1, Livio Pagano1.
Abstract
It is still under debate whether granulocyte transfusions (GTs) substantially increase survival in patients with febrile neutropenia. We retrospectively examined data relative to 96 patients with hematological malignancies receiving 491 GTs during 114 infectious episodes (IE). Patients were grouped according to the median doses of granulocytes transfused during the infectious episode (low-dose group: <1.5-x108 cells/Kg; standard-dose group: 1.5-3.0x108 cells/Kg and high-dose group: >3.0x108 cells/Kg). The impact of clinical, microbiological and GT-related variables on the infection-related mortality (IRM) was investigated. The IRM was not influenced by the number of GTs or by the total amount of granulocytes received, whereas a dose-related effect of the median dose received for IE was detected at univariate analysis (IRM of 18.4% in the standard-dose group, 44.4% in the low-dose group and 48.4% in the high-dose group, p = 0.040) and confirmed at multivariate analysis (OR 3.7, IC 95% 1.5-8.9; 0.004 for patients not receiving standard doses of GTs). Moreover, patients receiving GTs at doses lower or greater than standard had increased risk for subsequent ICU admission and reduced overall survival. The dose-related effect of GTs was confirmed in bacterial but not in fungal infections. Preliminary findings obtained from a subgroup of patients candidate to GTs revealed that levels of inflammatory response mediators increase in a dose-related manner after GTs, providing a possible explanation for the detrimental effect exerted by high-dose transfusions. GTs can constitute a valuable tool to improve the outcome of infections in neutropenic patients, provided that adequate recipient-tailored doses are supplied. Further investigations of the immunomodulatory effects of GTs are recommended.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27487075 PMCID: PMC4972400 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0159569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Patient and granulocyte transfusion characteristics in 114 infective episodes.
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| 46 (20–74) | |
| 74/40 | |
| 88 (77.2) | |
| 15 (13.2) | |
| 7 (6.2) | |
| 2 (1.8) | |
| 1 (0.8) | |
| 1 (0.8 | |
| 73 (64.1) | |
| 41 (35.9) | |
| 18 (3–79) | |
| 5 (2–33) | |
| 27 (23.6) | |
| 87 (76.4) | |
| 69 (60.5) | |
| 34 (29.8) | |
| 5 (4.3) | |
| 9 (7.9) | |
| 5 (4.3 | |
| 23 (20.1) | |
| 91 (79.9 | |
| 63 (55.2) | |
| 51 (44.8) | |
| 35 (30.7) | |
| 1 (82) | |
| 2 (11) | |
| 3 (2) | |
| 4 (1) | |
| 4 (1–14) | |
| 8.90 (0.53–53.23) | |
| 2.16 (0.46–7.34) |
GT: granulocyte transfusion, ICU: Intensive Care Unit; allo-HSCT: allogeneic-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
a Four urinary, three soft tissues, and two ocular infections.
Microbiological records gathered in 114 infective episodes treated with granulocyte transfusions.
| Infection | Number of cases |
|---|---|
FUO: fever of unknown origin; XDR: extensively drug resistant
Micrococcus luteus (N = 2); Rothia mucilaginosa (N = 1); Corynebacterium amycolatum (N = 1); Legionella pneumophila (N = 1); Bacteroides ovatus (N = 1).
bGram-negative bacterial/fungal infections: N = 19; Gram-negative/Gram-positive bacterial infections: N = 16; Gram-negative/Gram-negative bacterial infections: N = 5; Gram-positive/Gram-positive bacterial infection: N = 1.
Effect of clinical, microbiological and transfusion findings on requirement of ICU admission and infection-related mortality (univariate analysis).
| Characteristics | Number of patients | IRM (%) | p | ICU (%) | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males: 74 | 23 (31.0) | 18 (24.3) | |||
| Females: 40 | 12 (30.0) | >0.99 | 8 (20.0) | 0.848 | |
| Myeloid neoplasms: 9 | 32 (33.3) | 24 (25.0) | |||
| Lymphoid neoplasms: 18 | 3 (16.6) | 0.263 | 2 (11.1) | 0.352 | |
| Yes: 25 | 9 (36) | 6 (30.0) | |||
| No: 89 | 26 (29.2) | 0.459 | 20 (22.0) | 0.788 | |
| First line: 73 | 26 (35.6) | 19 (26.0) | |||
| Subsequent lines: 41 | 9 (21.9) | 0.144 | 7 (17.0) | 0.113 | |
| Yes: 23 | 8 (34.7) | 4 (17.3) | |||
| No: 91 | 27 (29.6) | 0.622 | 12 (13.1) | 0.587 | |
| Yes: 73 | 28 (38.3) | 20 (27.3) | |||
| No: 41 | 7 (17) | 6 (14.6) | 0.168 | ||
| Yes: 57 | 20 (35) | 18(31.5) | |||
| No: 57 | 15 (26.3) | 0.417 | 22 (17.5) | ||
| Yes: 24 | 5 (20.8) | 4 (16.6) | |||
| No: 90 | 30 (33.3) | 0.321 | 22 (24.4) | 0.586 | |
| Yes: 41 | 16 (39.0) | 11 (26.8) | |||
| No: 73 | 19 (26.0) | 0.204 | 15 (20.5) | 0.490 | |
| Yes: 38 | 18 (47.3) | 11 (28.9) | |||
| No: 76 | 17 (22.3) | 15 (19.7) | 0.344 | ||
| 18 | 8 (44.4) | 5 (27.7) | |||
| 65 | 12 (18.5) | 4 (6.1) | |||
| 3 | 15 (48.4) | 5 (16.1) | |||
| Yes: 65 | 12 (18.4) | 4 (6.1) | |||
| No: 76 | 23 (46.9) | 10 (20.4) |
ICU: Intensive Care Unit; Allo-HSCT: allogeneic-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; XDR: extensively drug resistant.
a Patients died for infection had a slightly higher median age than others (51 years, range 22–71 versus 45 years range 20–74, respectively, p = 0.055).
bXDR infections consisted of Klebsiella pneumoniae (N = 30), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (N = 7) and Acinetobacter (N = 5); 4 patients had multiple XDR infections.
cPMN doses are intended as x108/Kg. Only GTs given before ICU admission were included in the analysis of the risk for ICU admission.
Fig 1Infection-related mortality in patient grouped according to the median dose of granulocyte received.
A) Mortality rate according to the number of granulocyte transfusions received. B) Mortality rate according to the time elapsed from the first granulocyte transfusion. Yellow bars represent patients in the low-dose group (median PMN dose inferior to1.5x108/Kg), blue bars represent patients in the standard-dose group (median PMN dose 1.5–3.0x108/Kg) and grey bars represent patients in the high-dose group (median PMN dose greater than 3.0x108/Kg). White asterisks refer to standard-dose versus non-standard dose groups. *p<0.05; **p<0.001.
Characteristics of patients grouped according to median PMN doses.
| Characteristics | Low doses n = 18 | Standard doses n = 65 | High doses n = 31 | p | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10/8 | 45/20 | 19/12 | 0.496 | 0.323 | |
| 16/2 | 52/13 | 29/2 | 0.194 | 0.111 | |
| 4 (22) | 12 (18) | 8 (25) | 0.705 | 0.491 | |
| 16/2 | 39/26 | 18/13 | 0.056 | 0.330 | |
| 0 (0) | 13 (20.0) | 10 (32.2) | >0.99 | ||
| 11 (61.1) | 28 (43.0) | 18 (58.0) | 0.230 | 0.079 | |
| 3/8/7 | 7/36/22 | 0/19/12 | 0.863 | 0.694 | |
| 11 (61.1) | 28 (43.0) | 18 (58.0) | 0.230 | 0.130 | |
| 2 (11.1) | 16 (24.6) | 6 (19.3) | 0.445 | 0.356 | |
| 8 (44.4) | 21 (32.3) | 11 (35.4) | 0.633 | 0.553 | |
| 7 (38.8) | 20 (30.7) | 11 (35.4) | 0.776 | 0.551 | |
| 8 (44.4) | 38 (58.4) | 17 (54.8) | 0.452 | 0.570 | |
| 5 (2–14) | 5 (2–33) | 5.5 (2–33) | 0.550 | 0.604 | |
| 8 (44.4) | 12 (18.5) | 15 (48.4) | |||
| 53 (38–74) | 45 (20–71) | 49 (21–74) | 0.107 | 0.087 | |
| 18.5 (10–79) | 20 (6–76) | 17 (3–73) | 0.700 | 0.470 | |
| 1 (1–5) | 3 (1–10) | 2 (1–11) | 0.200 | 0.109 |
Low doses are intended as <1.5x108/Kg; standard doses are intended as 1.5-3x108/Kg and high doses are intended as >3x108/Kg. ICU: intensive care unit; allo-HSCT: allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation; FUO: fever of unknown origin; XDR: extensively drug resistant; GT: granulocyte transfusion; IRM: infection-related mortality.
acomparison among three groups.
bcomparison between standard dose-group and cumulated low dose- and high dose-groups.
Combined effect of clinical and transfusion parameters on infection-related mortality and survival estimates
| OR (95% CI) | p | |
|---|---|---|
| 1.4 (0.5–4.2) | 0.482 | |
| 1.0 (0.3–3.0) | 0.938 | |
| 1.8 (0.5–5.6) | 0.295 | |
| 2.4 (0.9–6.6) | 0.069 | |
| 3.7 (1.5–8.9) | 0.004 |
allo-HSCT: allogeneic-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; XDR: extensively drug resistant.
aMedian PMN doses are intended as standard (1.5–3.0 x108/Kg) or not (<1.5x108/Kg and > 3.0x108/Kg).
Fig 2Survival curves according to the median doses of granulocytes received.
The survival was determined as the interval between the first day with ANC<500/μL and death or neutropenia recovery. Differences were estimated using the log-rank test. A) Survival of neutropenic patients during overall 114 infectious episodes. B) Survival of neutropenic patients during bacterial infections C) Survival of neutropenic patients during disseminated fungal infections. Yellow curves represent patients in the low-dose group (median PMN dose inferior to1.5x108/Kg), blue curves represent patients in the standard-dose group (median PMN dose 1.5–3.0x108/Kg) and grey curves represent patients in the high-dose group (median PMN dose greater than 3.0x108/Kg), dotted curves represent cumulated patients in low and high dose groups.
Fig 3Cytokine plasma concentrations before and after transfusions.
IL1β,IL6, TNF-α and INF-γ levels were measured in 4 patients receiving 8 GTs and in 6 patients receiving RBCs transfusions, as control. In all patients, samples were collected immediately before and 6–8 hours after transfusions. Results are expressed as mean values±SEM. The cytokine concentration observed in samples collected post-GTs were proportional to the PMN dose delivered. *p<0.05