Literature DB >> 9233569

Activation during preparation of therapeutic platelets affects deterioration during storage: a comparative flow cytometric study of different production methods.

P Metcalfe1, L M Williamson, C P Reutelingsperger, I Swann, W H Ouwehand, A H Goodall.   

Abstract

Three different separation methods, all using centrifugation, are routinely used to prepare therapeutic platelet concentrates from human donor blood. Platelet concentrates derived from platelet-rich plasma (PRP-PC), buffy coat (BC-PC) and apheresis (AP-PC) were investigated at the end of production, and over an 8 d storage period. Change in platelet surface markers were measured by flow cytometry, using fluorescein-conjugated antibodies to fibrinogen, P-selectin (CD62P), GPIIb-IIIa (CD41), GPIb alpha (CD42b) and GPV (CD42d), and fluorescein-conjugated Annexin V was used to measure expression of anionic phospholipid. All concentrates showed some changes during preparation but PRP-PC underwent the greatest changes with significantly higher levels of P-selectin (P<0.001) and bound Annexin V (P=0.001) than AP-PC or BC-PC, and lower levels of GPIb alpha (P=0.002) and GPV (P<0.001). These changes were attributable to component separation rather than venesection. These markers all continued to change on storage with a strong positive correlation between the changes seen during production and those after 5 d storage. PRP-PC continued to show the greatest changes whereas BC-PC showed the least. Fibrinogen was bound to 40-50% of platelets in all preparations and this did not alter significantly on storage whereas total expression of GPIIb-IIIa remained unchanged throughout. There was no evidence that the platelet surface changes were thrombin-mediated and leucocyte depletion of BP-PC by filtration had no effect on the changes. It is proposed that the deterioration of platelet concentrates during storage may be related to activation occurring during preparation. 'Whole blood' flow cytometry using a panel of fluorescein-labelled reagents provides an informative method for evaluating platelet concentrates.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9233569     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2141.1997.1572983.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Haematol        ISSN: 0007-1048            Impact factor:   6.998


  19 in total

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8.  Hemostatic function of apheresis platelets stored at 4°C and 22°C.

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Review 9.  A general change of the platelet transfusion policy from apheresis platelet concentrates to pooled platelet concentrates is associated with a sharp increase in donor exposure and infection rates.

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10.  Platelets from platelet-rich-plasma versus buffy-coat-derived platelets: what is the difference?

Authors:  Hans Gulliksson
Journal:  Rev Bras Hematol Hemoter       Date:  2012
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