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Frequency and causes of refractoriness in multiply transfused patients.

The use of leukocyte-depleted blood components has become the standard therapy for multiply transfused patients during the past few years, as a measure to reduce the frequency of alloimmunization and refractoriness. We assessed frequency and causes of refractoriness, defined as a repeated 24-h post-transfusion platelet count below 20,000/microliters, in 145 consecutive patients who received three or more single-donor platelet concentrates during a 1-year period. Flow-cytometric detection of anti-platelet antibodies and a glycoprotein-specific ELISA were applied for the diagnosis of alloimmunization. Forty patients (27.6%) had at least one episode of refractoriness. In 25 of these 40 patients (62.5%), nonimmune factors (fever, sepsis, coagulopathy, splenomegaly) alone were the cause. In 15 refractory patients alloantibodies were detected. In seven patients (17.5%), alloimmunization alone caused an inadequate transfusion response, while in eight refractory patients (20.0%) alloimmunization and fever or sepsis were present. HLA antibodies were detected in 17 patients (11.7%); three patients (2%) had platelet-specific antibodies in addition to HLA antibodies; in two patients panreactive platelet antibodies were detectable. All 17 patients had a history of previous transfusions or pregnancy. We did not observe primary immunization in patients transfused exclusively with filtered (leukodepleted) blood products. Our data suggest that alloimmunization in patients with a negative risk history can be prevented by the exclusive use of leukodepleted blood components.

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