Platelet washing to prevent recurrent febrile reactions to leucocyte‐reduced transfusions
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Transfusion Medicine
- Vol. 11 (1) , 45-47
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3148.2001.00280.x
Abstract
Symptoms of fever and/or rigours after transfusion continue to occur commonly in patients receiving platelets leucocyte‐reduced after storage. A cohort of 24 consecutive patients who had experienced severe or repeated febrile nonhaemolytic reactions to post‐storage leucocyte‐reduced platelet transfusions were treated with saline‐washed, post‐storage leucocyte‐reduced platelets. The frequency of reactions declined from 20% of transfusions (n = 191) to 0·6% (n = 331) after instituting saline‐washed, post‐storage leucocyte‐reduced platelet transfusions. These results support the hypothesis that substances present in the supernatant of stored platelet concentrates mediate febrile nonhaemolytic transfusion reactions, and provide one strategy for preventing their occurrence.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- A randomized controlled trial comparing plasma removal with white cell reduction to prevent reactions to plateletsTransfusion, 1999
- Febrile reactions to platelet transfusion: the effect of increased interleukin 6 levels in concentrates prepared by the platelet‐rich plasma methodTransfusion, 1996
- The role of cytokines in blood transfusion reactionsBlood Reviews, 1995
- Cytokine generation in stored, white cell‐reduced, and bacterially contaminated units of red cellsTransfusion, 1995
- The Role of Cytokines and Adhesive Molecules in Febrile Non-Hemolytic Transfusion ReactionsImmunological Investigations, 1995
- The Role of the Plasma from Platelet Concentrates in Transfusion ReactionsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Cytokine generation in stored platelet concentratesTransfusion, 1994
- Effect of Prestorage Leukocyte Removal on the Cytokine Levels in Stored Platelet ConcentratesVox Sanguinis, 1994
- Increased tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), interleukin 1, and interleukin 6 (IL‐6) levels in the plasma of stored platelet concentrates: relationship between TNF alpha and IL‐6 levels and febrile transfusion reactionsTransfusion, 1993
- Evaluation of a centrifugal blood cell processor for washing platelet concentratesTransfusion, 1988