Transfusion Medicine. Jeffrey McCullough

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Transfusion Medicine - Jeffrey McCullough

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cells that circulated and about a 75% reduction in migration into a skin window [88], but storage at room temperature for 8 hours did not reduce the intravascular recovery, survival, or migration into a skin chamber [88]. In vivo recovery, survival, or migration was reduced further when granulocytes were stored longer than 8 hours at room temperature or for even 8 hours between 1 and 6°C. Thus, it appears that granulocytes can be stored for up to 8 hours at room temperature before transfusion.

      Granulocyte concentrates from G‐CSF‐stimulated donors contain large numbers of granulocytes with increases in IL‐1B and IL‐8, and decreases in pH during storage [75]. Thus, storage of granulocyte concentrates obtained from G‐CSF‐stimulated donors is probably even less effective than these data indicated. It is recommended that granulocytes be transfused within a very few hours. AABB standards allow storage for up to 24 hours at 20–24°C [47].

      Donor–recipient matching for granulocyte transfusion

      ABO antigens are probably not present on granulocytes (see Chapter 8), but granulocyte concentrates must be ABO‐compatible with the recipient because of the substantial volume of red cells in the concentrates. The clinical impact of ABO incompatibility on granulocyte transfusion was evaluated in one study [92]. A small number of 111In‐labeled granulocytes free of RBCs were injected into ABO‐incompatible recipients. The intravascular recovery, survival, and tissue localization of the cells were not different from those seen when similar injections were given to ABO‐compatible subjects [92]. This study was not intended to encourage the use of ABO‐incompatible granulocyte transfusions, but this could be considered if granulocyte concentrates that are depleted of RBCs could be prepared.

      Incompatibility by leukoagglutination or lymphocytotoxicity is associated with the failure of transfused CML cells to circulate or localize at sites of inflammation [93, 94]. Studies using 111In‐labeled granulocytes in humans established that granulocyte‐agglutinating antibodies were associated with decreased intravascular recovery and survival, failure of the cells to localize at known sites of inflammation [95], and excess sequestration of transfused granulocytes in the pulmonary vasculature [95, 96]. However, applying these research data to the practical operation of a blood bank and granulocyte transfusion service is difficult because granulocytes can be stored for only a few hours, and cells are not usually available for crossmatching to allow advance selection of compatible donors. The only practical approach has been to monitor the recipient plasma for the presence of granulocyte‐agglutinating antibodies, traditionally done by screening the patients’ serum against a panel of cells periodically. More recently, in vitro techniques such as flow cytometry have been developed for detecting anti–human leukocyte antigen antibodies.

      If a patient becomes alloimmunized, trials of human leukocyte antigen–matched unrelated donors or family members can be selected for leukapheresis, if available. However, the problem of donor–recipient matching and compatibility testing for granulocyte transfusion has not been solved.

      For malignancies in which there was suspected marrow involvement, bone marrow aspiration is unsuitable for autologous transplant because of the presence of tumor cells.

      However, hematopoietic stem cells are present not only in the marrow but also in the peripheral circulation and can be collected by cytapheresis. Normally the number of circulating PBSCs is much less than in the marrow, but after chemotherapy‐induced marrow suppression, there is a rebound and the number of PBSCs increases substantially. The PBSCs—expected to contain few, if any, malignant cells—can be used for marrow rescue after high‐dose chemotherapy. These autologous transplants of PBSCs made new chemotherapy regimens possible and established that PBSCs could be used successfully for autologous marrow transplantation [97–102].

      For several years, the use of PBSCs was limited to autologous transplants. It was feared that the large number of T‐lymphocytes contained in the PBSC concentrates would cause severe graft versus host disease, and that T‐depletion would result in an unacceptably large loss of PBSCs. However, this did not occur [102–107]. PBSCs result in more rapid engraftment [108], give results equivalent to marrow [107, 109], and may provide faster lymphocyte return, resulting in fewer infections [110]. Thus, there has been considerable interest in the methods to obtain PBSCs from both patients and normal donors.

      PBSCs can be obtained from the peripheral blood by apheresis, but because of the small number of circulating PBSCs, multiple procedures would be necessary to obtain enough cells for transplantation from unstimulated donors. To further increase the level of circulating PBSCs, donors are given the growth factor G‐CSF. In studies of normal subjects, the administration of G‐CSF causes an increase in the percentage of CD34+ cells from 0.05% before treatment to about 1.5% after 5 days [111–113]. This results in a yield of about 4.5 × 108 CD34+ cells from a single apheresis [112]. The usual dose of CD34+ cells considered suitable for transplantation is about 2.5–5 × 106/kg or about2 × 108 for a 70‐kg person. Thus, one such apheresis concentrate is usually adequate for a transplant.

      Another approach to reducing the number of apheresis procedures necessary is large‐volume leukapheresis, in which 15 or more liters of donor blood is processed to increase the number of PBSCs obtained [114] or the use of the agent plerixafor for stem cell mobilization.

      As a result of these factors, collection of PBSCs from normal donors now exceeds marrow in many hematopoietic transplant centers [73, 112, 115, 116], thus eliminating marrow collection in the operating suite, along with the attendant risks of anesthesia and the marrow collection process.

      Collection procedures

      For normal donors, the usual skin preparation, venous access, needles or catheters, solutions, and software are used. Blood flow rates of 40–80 mL/min are used depending on the donor’s venous access and blood flow tolerance. The MNC collection procedures involve processing 10–15 L of blood over 3 to 4 hours, although usually a larger volume of blood is processed to increase the PBSC yield [114]. There may be recruitment of CD34+ cells during extended apheresis up to 40 L over 5 hours. However, it is not clear that the CD34+ cell levels remain stable or increase (recruitment) during apheresis of normal donors, and so most centers process 15–18 L of blood, and this usually provides a suitable dose in one or two procedures.

      Effects of peripheral blood stem cell collection on normal donors

      The

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