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Therapeutic Effectiveness of Frozen Platelet Concentrates for Transfusion

Overview
Journal Blood
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Hematology
Date 1981 Feb 1
PMID 6934835
Citations 2
Authors
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Abstract

Six patients received platelet concentrate transfusions from their HLA-identical siblings. Platelet concentrates were administered either fresh, or after being frozen in 10% dimethylsulfoxide, at a slow controlled rate (1 degree C/min) or rapidly (approximately 8 degrees C/min) in the vapor-phase of a liquid nitrogen refrigerator. The median freeze-thaw loss was 13.5%. The mean 1-hr and 20-hr corrected increments in platelet count were calculated for fresh platelet concentrates transfused before and after transfusion with controlled-rate frozen and vapor-phase frozen platelet concentrates. There was no significant difference among the first and second transfusion of fresh platelet concentrates, nor was the difference observed between fresh and controlled-rate frozen platelet concentrates significant. The difference between fresh and vapor-phase frozen platelet concentrates, and between controlled-rate frozen and vapor-phase frozen platelet concentrates were highly significant (p < 0.01). In vitro tests of aggregation using ristocetin and platelet ultrastructural studies paralleled the transfusion experience. Our results indicate that HLA-identical platelet concentrates can be successfully frozen and thawed for transfusion if a slow, controlled rate of freezing is employed. The use of HLA-identical frozen platelet concentrates may be important in emergency situations for the refractory patient and potentially for the establishment of a platelet concentrate bank.

Citing Articles

Impact of cold storage on platelets treated with Intercept pathogen inactivation.

Six K, Devloo R, Compernolle V, Feys H Transfusion. 2019; 59(8):2662-2671.

PMID: 31187889 PMC: 6851707. DOI: 10.1111/trf.15398.


Freezing of Apheresis Platelet Concentrates in 6% Dimethyl Sulfoxide: The First Preliminary Study in Turkey.

Yilmaz S, Cetinkaya R, Eker I, Unlu A, Uyanik M, Tapan S Turk J Haematol. 2015; 33(1):28-33.

PMID: 25912150 PMC: 4805338. DOI: 10.4274/tjh.2014.0181.