| Literature DB >> 28053805 |
Elisabeth Maurer-Spurej1, Kate Chipperfield2.
Abstract
High quality means good fitness for the intended use. Research activity regarding quality measures for platelet transfusions has focused on platelet storage and platelet storage lesion. Thus, platelet quality is judged from the manufacturer's point of view and regulated to ensure consistency and stability of the manufacturing process. Assuming that fresh product is always superior to aged product, maintaining in vitro characteristics should preserve high quality. However, despite the highest in vitro quality standards, platelets often fail in vivo. This suggests we may need different quality measures to predict platelet performance after transfusion. Adding to this complexity, platelets are used clinically for very different purposes: platelets need to circulate when given as prophylaxis to cancer patients and to stop bleeding when given to surgery or trauma patients. In addition, the emerging application of platelet-rich plasma injections exploits the immunological functions of platelets. Requirements for quality of platelets intended to prevent bleeding, stop bleeding, or promote wound healing are potentially very different. Can a single measurable characteristic describe platelet quality for all uses? Here we present microparticle measurement in platelet samples, and its potential to become the universal quality characteristic for platelet production, storage, viability, function, and compatibility.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28053805 PMCID: PMC5178367 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6140239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Blood Transfus ISSN: 2090-9195
Figure 1Example of dynamic light scattering test results showing the contribution of exosome-sized particles (radii below 50 nm), microparticles (radii 50–550 nm), platelets, and microaggregates (radii above 550 nm). (a) Homogeneous platelets (few or no microparticles, platelets with predominantly discoid shape with low polydispersity, and narrow blue peak). (b) Heterogeneous platelets (many microparticles, platelets with high polydispersity, and broad blue peak).
Comparison of microparticle testing technologies.
| Technology | Principle | Manufacturer | Invasive1 | Standards, dilutions required | Trained specialist required | MP separation required | Prep. | Time/test [min] | Daily maintenance |
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| ThromboLUX | DLS | LightIntegra | No | No | No | No | 5 | 8 | No |
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| Flow cytometer | Static light scattering, fluorescence | Abbott, Becton Dickinson amongst others | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | 30+ | 5–10 | Yes |
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| Micro flow cytometer | Static light scattering, fluorescence | Apogee flow systems | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | 30+ | 5–10 | Yes |
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| qNano Gold | Size exclusion chromatography | Izon Science | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 20† | 10–15 | No |
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| NanoSight | DLS particle tracking | Malvern | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 15 | 6–75 | No |
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| ELISA | Double antibody sandwich technique | JIMRO Co. Ltd., Diagnostica Stago | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | 30+ | 5–10 | No |
1The test is considered invasive if the required sample volume is larger than what can be aseptically obtained from a tubing segment.
Consumables only usable for 6–8 hours. †Isolation of microparticles by differential centrifugation or size exclusion chromatography required, dynamic light scattering (DLS), microparticles (MP), and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
Overview of published clinical microparticle studies.
| Performance topic | Reference | Type of microparticle assay | Total number of subjects in study | Concentration [MP/L] | Summary statement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accurate enumeration of microparticles (especially in the presence of platelets or other particles) | Balvers et al. 2015 [ | FC | 20 (10 trauma patients; 10 healthy) | 7.5 × 103 | Flow cytometry does not count microparticles if bound in complexes; reported concentration is about 106 lower than reported elsewhere; sample was prepared at low temperature |
| Jayachandran et al. 2011 [ | FC | 118 (58 assayed for plasma microparticles) | N/A | Flow cytometry does not detect aggregates | |
| van Ierssel et al. 2012 [ | FC | 13 in vitro lipid (5 coronary heart disease; 8 healthy); 5 in vivo lipid, healthy | 2.5 × 108 (EMP only) | Flow cytometry data are affected by high circulating levels of lipids | |
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| Size of microparticles (below the detection limit of many technologies) | Leong et al. 2011 [ | FC | 6 (acute myocardial infarction; healthy) | 3 × 109 | Platelet microparticle size is below stated detection limits of most flow cytometers. However, study confirmed that flow cytometry is capable of analyzing microparticles from plasma; approximately 2-fold for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patient |
| Robert et al. 2012 [ | FC | 40 (30 coronary disease; 10 healthy) | 2.0 × 109 (1.1 × 1010 with high sensitivity FCM) | Standard flow cytometry does not detect small microparticles. High-sensitivity flow cytometry allows measurement of previously undetectable microparticles; approximately 10-fold for coronary patients | |
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| Probe/marker selection | Hou et al. 2011 [ | FC | 20 healthy donors | 1 × 109 (fresh) | Annexin V does not bind to membranes at low phosphatidyl-serine levels and is Ca2+ dependent; lactadherin is proposed as an alternative |
| Iversen et al. 2013 [ | FC | 49 (20 healthy; 29 systemic lupus erythematosus) | 9 × 109 | Annexin V binding is Ca2+ dependent, resulting in potential clotting of plasma; approximately 2-fold for patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) | |
| Lanuti et al. 2012 [ | FC | 34 (20 diabetes; 14 healthy) | 1.1 × 108 (EMP only) | Endothelial microparticles and circulating endothelial cells share markers such as CD144 and CD146 leading to overestimation; approximately 2-fold for patients with type 2 diabetes (Iversen et al. published endothelial microparticle concentration to be a factor 10 lower than platelet microparticles) | |
| Bohling et al. 2012 [ | ELISA, clot-based and chromogenic and flow cytometry | 75 (24 healthy, 28 trauma, 23 nontrauma (patients taking warfarin, heparin, or lupus anticoagulants)) | 4 × 1010 | The performance characteristics of a clot-based versus chromogenic procoagulant phospholipid assay were compared and low correlation found; neither assay was considered optimal | |
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| Standardization of methods | Marchetti et al. 2014 [ | ELISA, clot-based and thrombin generation | 145 (72 control, 73 essential thrombocythemia) | The performance characteristics of clot-based procoagulant phospholipid assay and thrombin generation assay were compared | |
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| Method selection | Strasser et al. 2013 [ | FC, prothrombinase ELISA, clot-based ELISA | 31 healthy donors | 1.2 × 109 | The performance characteristics of a clot-based procoagulant phospholipid assay, prothrombinase assay, and flow cytometry were compared |
| Labrie et al. 2013 [ | DLS | 24 apheresis platelet concentrates from normal volunteers | 1.5 × 1012 | ThromboLUX microparticle assay was compared to flow cytometry and correlated highly | |
| Xu et al. 2011 [ | DLS | 160 (81 platelet-rich plasma, 79 apheresis platelet concentrates) | 2 × 1011 | ThromboLUX microparticle assay was compared to flow cytometry [ | |
Flow cytometry (FC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS).