| Literature DB >> 29773572 |
Pieter F van der Meer1, Paula F Ypma1,2, Nan van Geloven3, Joost A van Hilten1, Rinie J van Wordragen-Vlaswinkel4, Okke Eissen2, Jaap J Zwaginga4, Michael Trus5, Erik A M Beckers6, Peter Te Boekhorst7, Alan Tinmouth8, Yulia Lin9, Cyrus Hsia10, David Lee11, Philip J Norris12, Raymond P Goodrich13, Anneke Brand1,4, Tor Hervig14, Nancy M Heddle15, Johanna G van der Bom1,16, Jean-Louis H Kerkhoffs1,2.
Abstract
Pathogen inactivation of platelet concentrates reduces the risk for blood-borne infections. However, its effect on platelet function and hemostatic efficacy of transfusion is unclear. We conducted a randomized noninferiority trial comparing the efficacy of pathogen-inactivated platelets using riboflavin and UV B illumination technology (intervention) compared with standard plasma-stored platelets (control) for the prevention of bleeding in patients with hematologic malignancies and thrombocytopenia. The primary outcome parameter was the proportion of transfusion-treatment periods in which the patient had grade 2 or higher bleeding, as defined by World Health Organization criteria. Between November 2010 and April 2016, 469 unique patients were randomized to 567 transfusion-treatment periods (283 in the control arm, 284 in the intervention arm). There was a 3% absolute difference in grade 2 or higher bleeding in the intention-to-treat analysis: 51% of the transfusion-treatment periods in the control arm and 54% in the intervention arm (95% confidence interval [CI], -6 to 11; P = .012 for noninferiority). However, in the per-protocol analysis, the difference in grade 2 or higher bleeding was 8%: 44% in the control arm and 52% in the intervention arm (95% CI -2 to 18; P = .19 for noninferiority). Transfusion increment parameters were ∼50% lower in the intervention arm. There was no difference in the proportion of patients developing HLA class I alloantibodies. In conclusion, the noninferiority criterion for pathogen-inactivated platelets was met in the intention-to-treat analysis. This finding was not demonstrated in the per-protocol analysis. This trial was registered at The Netherlands National Trial Registry as #NTR2106 and at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02783313.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29773572 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2018-02-831289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113