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Original Article

Dose of Prophylactic Platelet Transfusions and Prevention of Hemorrhage

Sherrill J. Slichter, M.D., Richard M. Kaufman, M.D., Susan F. Assmann, Ph.D., Jeffrey McCullough, M.D., Darrell J. Triulzi, M.D., Ronald G. Strauss, M.D., Terry B. Gernsheimer, M.D., Paul M. Ness, M.D., Mark E. Brecher, M.D., Cassandra D. Josephson, M.D., Barbara A. Konkle, M.D., Robert D. Woodson, M.D., Thomas L. Ortel, M.D., Ph.D., Christopher D. Hillyer, M.D., Donna L. Skerrett, M.D., Keith R. McCrae, M.D., Steven R. Sloan, M.D., Ph.D., Lynne Uhl, M.D., James N. George, M.D., Victor M. Aquino, M.D., Catherine S. Manno, M.D., Janice G. McFarland, M.D., John R. Hess, M.D., Cindy Leissinger, M.D., and Suzanne Granger, M.S.

N Engl J Med 2010; 362:600-613February 18, 2010

Abstract

Background

We conducted a trial of prophylactic platelet transfusions to evaluate the effect of platelet dose on bleeding in patients with hypoproliferative thrombocytopenia.

Methods

We randomly assigned hospitalized patients undergoing hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation or chemotherapy for hematologic cancers or solid tumors to receive prophylactic platelet transfusions at a low dose, a medium dose, or a high dose (1.1×1011, 2.2×1011, or 4.4×1011 platelets per square meter of body-surface area, respectively), when morning platelet counts were 10,000 per cubic millimeter or lower. Clinical signs of bleeding were assessed daily. The primary end point was bleeding of grade 2 or higher (as defined on the basis of World Health Organization criteria).

Results

In the 1272 patients who received at least one platelet transfusion, the primary end point was observed in 71%, 69%, and 70% of the patients in the low-dose group, the medium-dose group, and the high-dose group, respectively (differences were not significant). The incidences of higher grades of bleeding, and other adverse events, were similar among the three groups. The median number of platelets transfused was significantly lower in the low-dose group (9.25×1011) than in the medium-dose group (11.25×1011) or the high-dose group (19.63×1011) (P=0.002 for low vs. medium, P<0.001 for high vs. low and high vs. medium), but the median number of platelet transfusions given was significantly higher in the low-dose group (five, vs. three in the medium-dose and three in the high-dose group; P<0.001 for low vs. medium and low vs. high). Bleeding occurred on 25% of the study days on which morning platelet counts were 5000 per cubic millimeter or lower, as compared with 17% of study days on which platelet counts were 6000 to 80,000 per cubic millimeter (P<0.001).

Conclusions

Low doses of platelets administered as a prophylactic transfusion led to a decreased number of platelets transfused per patient but an increased number of transfusions given. At doses between 1.1×1011 and 4.4×1011 platelets per square meter, the number of platelets in the prophylactic transfusion had no effect on the incidence of bleeding. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00128713.)

Media in This Article

Figure 1Days with Bleeding of Grade 2 or Higher in All Three Treatment Groups, According to Morning Platelet-Count Categories.
Table 1Baseline Characteristics of the Study Patients, According to Treatment Group.
Article

The optimal number of platelets in a prophylactic platelet transfusion is controversial.1,2, A standard dose for adults is considered to be approximately 3×1011 to 6×1011 platelets. 3 Higher doses than these could potentially result in superior hemostasis,4 but a lower dose might be equally effective while conserving the platelet supply. Two randomized trials with limited enrollment — one of 111 patients5 and the other of 119 patients6 — have compared a low dose of platelets to the standard dose. In both trials, the two doses prevented bleeding to a similar degree. We conducted a randomized trial of prophylactic platelet transfusions to determine the effects of the dose of platelets on clinical signs of bleeding, the use of platelet and red-cell transfusions, changes in the recipient's post-transfusion platelet count, days to next transfusion, and adverse events.7

Methods

A subcommittee of the Transfusion Medicine/Hemostasis Clinical Trials Network investigators designed the study and wrote the manuscript, which was reviewed by all authors. Site coordinators gathered the data and submitted the results electronically. (The study investigators and staff are listed in the Appendix.) The data were analyzed with the use of SAS software (version 9.2).8 The lead author wrote the first draft of the manuscript and vouches for the completeness and accuracy of the data. Institutional review boards approved the study. Adults provided written informed consent; and for children, a parent or legal guardian provided written informed consent. Children provided assent if required by local site policy. A data and safety monitoring board reviewed the data twice a year. Stopping boundaries for comparison of the primary end point between each pair of treatment groups were calculated with the use of an alpha spending function similar to O'Brien–Fleming boundaries.

Eligibility Criteria

Patients were eligible for the study if they were inpatients of any age undergoing hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation or chemotherapy for hematologic cancers or solid tumors and it was expected that they would have platelet counts of 10,000 per cubic millimeter or lower for 5 days or more. Additional criteria were a weight of 10 to 135 kg, prothrombin and partial-thromboplastin times 1.3 times the upper limit of the normal range or less, a fibrinogen level of 100 mg per deciliter or more, and no previous platelet transfusions for thrombocytopenia during the current period of hospitalization.

Exclusion criteria were as follows: bleeding of grade 2 or higher, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) bleeding scale9 (ranging from grades 1 through 4, with higher grades indicating worse bleeding; see below and the Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org) before or at the time of assessment; performance of bedside platelet leukoreduction; platelet refractoriness within the past 30 days, according to local criteria; a panel-reactive HLA antibody level of 20% or more; acute promyelocytic leukemia, idiopathic or thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, or the hemolytic–uremic syndrome; planned prophylactic transfusion of platelets at platelet counts of more than 10,000 per cubic millimeter10; major surgery within the previous 2 weeks; use of drugs intended to affect platelet number or function; pregnancy; and previous enrollment in this platelet-dose trial (PLADO trial).

Stratification and Randomization

Body-surface area was calculated from height and weight.11 Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1:1 ratio, by means of computer-generated permuted blocks, to receive platelet transfusions of one of three doses — 1.1×1011, 2.2×1011, and 4.4×1011 platelets per square meter per transfusion (low-dose group, medium-dose group, and high-dose group, respectively) — according to four treatment strata12: allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, autologous or syngeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, chemotherapy for hematologic cancer, or chemotherapy for solid tumor. Treatment-group assignments were balanced within trial sites with the use of dynamic balancing.12 For typical adults, the medium dose is similar to a standard adult dose with regard to the number of platelets.

Transfusions

The blood-transfusion service was given each patient's assigned dose and the allowable range, ±25% of the assigned dose. Site staff were not told the patient's assigned dose, but differences in transfusion volume prevented complete blinding. Selection of platelets for transfusion to achieve the correct “attempted dose” was specified as follows. For apheresis platelets, the platelet count at the time of collection was used to select a partial unit, a single unit, or multiple units. For pooled platelet concentrates, the mean platelet count per concentrate, based on quality-control data, was used to determine the number of platelet concentrates to combine. For each transfusion, an “at-issue” platelet count was obtained to determine the actual dose transfused. HLA-selected platelets were transfused completely to avoid product wastage, regardless of the patient's assigned dose.

Platelets were transfused prophylactically if the morning count was 10,000 per cubic millimeter or lower (the “trigger” threshold). The patient's physician could change the transfusion trigger threshold or dose if required by clinical indications, with a return to study guidelines as soon as possible. Local practice determined the indications for red-cell transfusion. Platelets and red cells were leukoreduced by means of filtration.

Clinical Assessments

Research staff performed daily assessments of bleeding using physical examinations, interviews with patients, and chart reviews for bleeding events. They also collected data on all bleeding described in the WHO criteria,9 except they did not perform urine dipstick or stool guaiac tests. The bleeding data were used to calculate each patient's daily bleeding grade. Daily platelet counts, hematocrit values, and hemoglobin levels were also measured.

The primary end point was bleeding of grade 2 or higher. Grade 2 bleeding was defined as oropharyngeal bleeding or epistaxis for more than 30 minutes during a 24-hour period, purpura of more than 1 in. (2.54 cm) in diameter, deep hematoma, joint bleeding, melena, hematochezia, hematemesis, gross hematuria, abnormal vaginal bleeding consisting of more than spotting, hemoptysis, blood in bronchopulmonary lavage specimens, visible blood in body-cavity fluid without symptoms, retinal bleeding without visual impairment, spinal-fluid specimens containing microscopic amounts of blood, or bleeding for more than 1 hour at invasive sites.9 (See the Supplementary Appendix for definitions of bleeding grades 0 through 4.) If an investigator indicated possible death from hemorrhage or if a deceased patient had had grade 3 or 4 bleeding, three nonstudy physicians adjudicated whether bleeding was the cause of death.

Adverse Events

Information was collected on all serious adverse events and on events commonly associated with transfusion that occurred during transfusion or within 4 hours afterward.

Study Completion

The study was considered to be completed at 30 days after the first platelet transfusion, after a 10-day period without a platelet transfusion, at hospital discharge, at death, or at withdrawal from the study — whichever occurred first.

Statistical Analysis

The primary end point was bleeding of grade 2 or higher; secondary end points were the highest grade of bleeding, total number of platelets transfused, and number of platelet transfusions. Other analyses were exploratory. To account for the three pairwise comparisons among the three treatment groups, two-sided P values of less than 0.017 were considered to indicate statistical significance. No other adjustment was made for analyzing multiple outcomes. The study was designed to have a statistical power of 85% to detect an absolute difference of 12.5% in the incidence of the primary end point for any pair among the three treatment groups, which required 450 patients per group.

Unless otherwise specified, all analyses were restricted to data for patients who received at least one platelet transfusion. Results were analyzed according to the patient's treatment assignment, even if platelet transfusions were not received at the assigned dose or were not administered in accordance with the prophylactic transfusion trigger threshold of 10,000 platelets per cubic millimeter.

Dichotomous end points were compared among the groups with the use of Fisher's exact test. The highest grade of bleeding was compared using an exact version of the Kruskall–Wallis test. The time to next transfusion and time to bleeding were compared among the groups by means of the log-rank test.13 Dose adherence for each transfusion, trigger-threshold adherence for each study day, pretransfusion and post-transfusion platelet-counts, platelet increments, and corrected count increments were compared among the groups with the use of generalized linear models to account for possible correlations between results within each patient.14,15 (The platelet increment is defined as the post-transfusion platelet count minus the pretransfusion count; the corrected count increment has a numerator of the platelet increment [in cubic millimeters] multiplied by the body-surface area [in square meters] and a denominator of the total number of platelets transfused divided by 1011.) Other continuous variables were analyzed with the use of the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. The post hoc subgroup analysis of data regarding the primary end point, according to randomization stratum, used a logistic-regression model with an interaction term.

Results

Study Population

Between 2004 and 2007, a total of 1351 patients were enrolled at 26 sites. Seventy-nine patients did not receive a platelet transfusion; however, including these patients in the analyses had a negligible effect on the results. The baseline characteristics of the study patients were well balanced among the three treatment groups (Table 1Table 1Baseline Characteristics of the Study Patients, According to Treatment Group.).

Adherence with Platelet Dose and Transfusion Trigger Threshold

Dose adherence was not required for 210 HLA-selected units of platelets and could not be reliably determined for an additional 331 volume-reduced units from which plasma was removed by centrifugation after collection. Among the 5466 prophylactic platelet transfusions with neither characteristic, the attempted dose was known for 5384 transfusions in 1162 patients — and there was dose adherence for 86% of these low-dose transfusions, 98% of these medium-dose transfusions, and 93% of these high-dose transfusions (P<0.001 for low dose vs. medium dose and medium dose vs. high dose) (Table 2Table 2Platelet-Dose Adherence and Response to Prophylactic Platelet Transfusions, According to Treatment Group.). Among the 1162 patients, all known attempted doses were in adherence for 79%, 92%, and 86% of patients in the low-dose, medium-dose, and high-dose groups, respectively (P<0.001 for low dose vs. medium dose, and P=0.004 for medium dose vs. high dose).

Platelet doses based on at-issue platelet counts were within the patient's assigned range for 71%, 80%, and 70% of transfusions in the low-dose group, medium-dose group, and high-dose group, respectively (P=0.007 for low dose vs. medium dose, and P<0.001 for medium dose vs. high dose). This result confirms that the platelet-selection procedure usually resulted in transfusions of at-issue doses in the assigned range. All known at-issue doses were within the assigned range for 51%, 63%, and 55% of patients in the low-dose, medium-dose, and high-dose groups, respectively (P<0.001 for low dose vs. medium dose).

Physicians ordered changes in the platelet dose for clinical reasons for 17% of patients in the low-dose group, 9% in the medium-dose group, and 7% in the high-dose group (P=0.003 for low dose vs. medium dose and P<0.001 for low dose vs. high dose). Overall, only 3% of patients had a dose change before the onset of bleeding of grade 2 or higher.

The trigger threshold of 10,000 platelets per cubic millimeter was adhered to on 90%, 92%, and 94% of patient-days in the low-dose group, medium-dose group, and high-dose group, respectively (P<0.001 for low dose vs. high dose). The trigger was adhered to on all study days for 53%, 62%, and 61% of patients, respectively (P=0.01 for low dose vs. medium dose). Physicians ordered changes in the trigger threshold for clinical reasons for 32%, 26%, and 25% of patients, respectively, but a total of only 7% of patients had a change in the trigger threshold before the onset of bleeding of grade 2 or higher.

Primary and Secondary End Points

In the 1351 patients who underwent randomization, the percentage with at least one episode of bleeding of grade 2 or higher was 68% in the low-dose group, 67% in the medium-dose group, and 69% in the high-dose group, with no significant differences among the groups (P=0.83 for low dose vs. medium dose and for low dose vs. high dose; P=0.66 for medium dose vs. high dose). Among the 1272 patients who received at least one platelet transfusion, the percentage of patients in each group with at least one episode of bleeding of grade 2 or higher was not significantly different (71%, 69% and 70%, respectively) (Table 3Table 3Primary and Key Secondary End Points, According to Treatment Group.).

Overall, the highest bleeding grade observed was no bleeding or bleeding of grade 1 in 31% of patients, grade 2 in 59%, grade 3 in 8%, and grade 4 in 2%. In each group, the median number of days of bleeding of grade 2 or higher was 1. The median time from randomization to onset of bleeding ranged from 7 to 8 days. The median number of red-cell units transfused per patient was 4. A total of 93% of patients received at least one red-cell transfusion. There were no significant differences among the three groups for any of these end points.

Bleeding of grade 2 or higher occurred in 79% of recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplants, 73% of patients who had hematologic cancers and were undergoing chemotherapy, and 57% of patients undergoing autologous or syngeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (P<0.001 for the comparison of the latter group with each of the first two groups). However, within each of these treatment categories, the platelet dose had no significant effect on bleeding.

The 1272 patients who received at least one transfusion were observed for a total of 24,309 days. Figure 1Figure 1Days with Bleeding of Grade 2 or Higher in All Three Treatment Groups, According to Morning Platelet-Count Categories. shows the percentage of days on which bleeding of grade 2 or higher occurred, according to the patient's morning platelet-count category. Bleeding of grade 2 or higher occurred on 25% of days with morning platelet counts of 5000 per cubic millimeter or lower, 17% of days with morning platelet counts from 6000 to 80,000 per cubic millimeter, 13% of days with morning platelet counts from 81,000 to 100,000 per cubic millimeter, and 8% of days with morning platelet counts over 100,000 per cubic millimeter (P<0.001 for platelet counts of ≤5000 per cubic millimeter vs. counts of 6000 to 80,000; P=0.001 for platelet counts of 81,000 to 100,000 per cubic millimeter vs. counts of 6000 to 80,000; and P<0.001 for platelet counts of >100,000 per cubic millimeter vs. counts of 6000 to 80,000) (Figure 1).

We could calculate the total number of platelets transfused per patient for 1000 patients. The median number of platelets transfused was 9.25×1011, 11.25×1011, and 19.63×1011 in the low-dose, medium-dose, and high-dose groups, respectively (P=0.002 for low dose vs. medium dose, P<0.001 for high dose vs. low dose and high dose vs. medium dose) (Table 3). The median number of platelet transfusions administered was five in the low-dose group as compared with three in the medium-dose group and three in the high-dose group (P<0.001 for low dose vs. medium dose and low dose vs. high dose).

Responses to Platelet Transfusions

The low-dose, medium-dose, and high-dose groups differed significantly in the median post-transfusion platelet count (22,000, 34,000, and 50,000 per cubic millimeter, respectively), the median increase in platelet count after transfusion (10,000, 19,000, and 38,000 per cubic millimeter, respectively), and the median number of days until the next transfusion (1.1, 1.9, and 2.9, respectively) (P<0.001 for all comparisons for all end points) (Table 2). The median 4-hour corrected count increment was 10,000 in the low-dose group, 10,000 in the medium-dose group, and 11,000 in the high-dose group, with no significant differences among groups.

Adverse Events

There were no significant differences among the three groups in the occurrence of any specific category of serious adverse events or in the percentage of patients who had one or more serious adverse events (Table 4Table 4Adverse Events, According to Treatment Group.). Wheezing during or shortly after transfusion was significantly more common in the high-dose group than in the medium-dose group. Nine patients in the low-dose group died, as did four patients in the medium-dose group and seven in the high-dose group; the number of deaths did not differ significantly among the three groups.

Study Completion

Completion of the study occurred at the time of hospital discharge for most patients (71%). Other causes of study completion were an absence of platelet transfusion for 10 days (in 14% of patients), the elapsing of 30 days from first platelet transfusion (10%), withdrawal from the study (4%), and death (2%). The three groups did not differ significantly with regard to reasons for study completion.

Discussion

This study evaluated the effects of platelet dose on hemostasis and transfusion end points. For a typical adult, the medium dose was equivalent to the standard dose currently used in clinical practice.16 The low dose was half the medium dose, and the high dose was twice the medium dose. There were high rates of adherence for platelet doses and transfusion trigger thresholds. Physicians changed the dose to a nonstudy dose for patients in the low-dose group more often than for those in the medium-dose and high-dose groups, but the changes were made primarily after the onset of bleeding of grade 2 or higher.

The percentages of patients who received at least one platelet transfusion and had bleeding of grade 2 or higher — 71%, 69%, and 70% in the low-, medium-, and high-dose groups, respectively — were not significantly different. The only death from hemorrhagic causes occurred in the high-dose group (from pulmonary hemorrhage). The highest grade of bleeding, the number of days of bleeding of grade 2 or higher, the number of days before the occurrence of bleeding of grade 2 or higher, and the occurrence and number of red-cell transfusions also did not differ significantly among the three groups. These findings confirm that the dose per prophylactic platelet transfusion, within the range of doses studied, did not significantly affect bleeding.

The percentage of patients with bleeding of grade 2 or higher was significantly less among those undergoing autologous or syngeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (57%) than among those with hematologic cancers who were undergoing chemotherapy (73%) or those undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (79%), as has been described previously.17 However, platelet dose had no significant effect on bleeding in any of these treatment categories.

Patients had a 25% risk of having bleeding of grade 2 or higher on days on which the morning platelet count was 5000 per cubic millimeter or lower, as compared with a 17% risk on days with counts from 6000 to 80,000 per cubic millimeter. Previous reports suggest that endothelial integrity can be maintained with platelet counts of 5000 per cubic millimeter or higher.18,19 Further reductions in the risk of bleeding at platelet counts of 80,000 per cubic millimeter or higher are postulated to be due to an improved clinical status.

The rates of bleeding seen in our trial are higher than those in several other platelet-transfusion trials.20-22 The reported incidence of bleeding depends on factors that often differ among studies, such as assessment method, frequency of assessment, criteria used for bleeding grade, and population of patients.20 In our study, consistent data collection was achieved with the use of daily hemostatic assessments performed by research staff who were unaware of the treatment assignments and who followed detailed instructions. Bleeding grades were ascertained on the basis of objective criteria, thus reducing bias.

To our knowledge, only two previously reported randomized trials, with limited enrollment, have evaluated the use of low-dose platelet transfusions as compared with standard-dose transfusions.5,6 Neither trial showed any significant differences regarding bleeding of any WHO grades — findings similar to those in our study.

The Strategies for Transfusion of Platelets (SToP) study (NCT00420914)6 was halted because of grade 4 bleeding in three patients in the low-dose group (1.5×1011 to 3.0×1011 platelets per transfusion), as compared with none in the standard-dose group (3.0×1011 to 6.0×1011 platelets per transfusion). A stopping rule of a 5% absolute difference between the two groups in the incidence of grade 4 bleeding was reached after only 58 and 61 patients were enrolled in the low-dose group and the standard-dose group, respectively. We did not find a significant difference in the incidence of grade 4 bleeding in our similar, but much larger, cohort. An important difference between our study and the SToP study was that we adjusted the dose of platelets for body-surface area, whereas in the SToP study, the same dose range was used for all patients in each of the two groups.

In our trial, the total number of platelets transfused — 9.25×1011 for the low dose, 11.25×1011 for the medium dose, and 19.63×1011 for the high dose — was significantly different among the three groups. However, the median number of transfusions per patient was significantly greater in the low-dose group (five transfusions) than in the medium- or high-dose group (three transfusions in each group) (P<0.001 for both comparisons). In the SToP study,6 the low-dose group also required significantly more transfusions than the standard-dose group.

As expected, the median platelet increment after transfusion in the low-dose group (10,000 per cubic millimeter) was approximately half the median increment in the medium-dose group (19,000 per cubic millimeter), and the median increment in the high-dose group (38,000 per cubic millimeter) was approximately twice the increment in the medium-dose group. The number of days until the next transfusion also differed significantly among the three groups: 1.1 days in the low-dose group, 1.9 in the medium-dose group, and 2.9 in the high-dose group. These data, data from other, smaller studies, and mathematical models all suggest that larger doses give higher increments and prolonged intervals until the next transfusion.3,23-27 However, the corrected count increment did not differ significantly among the three groups (i.e., differences in the increment were explained by differences in the number of platelets transfused).

In conclusion, when prophylactic transfusions are given after a trigger threshold of 10,000 platelets per cubic millimeter or lower is reached, the platelet dose has no significant effect on the incidence of bleeding in patients with hypoproliferative thrombocytopenia, probably because few platelets are needed to maintain hemostasis.18,19, A strategy of low-dose transfusion significantly reduces the quantity of platelets transfused, which could preserve these scarce blood components but could also increase the number of platelet transfusions.

Supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health to the Data Coordinating Center at New England Research Institutes (HL072268), Case Western Reserve University (HL072033), Children's Hospital Boston (HL072291), Cornell University (HL072196), Duke University (HL072289), Emory University (HL072248), Johns Hopkins University (HL072191), Massachusetts General Hospital (HL072299), Puget Sound Blood Center (HL072305), Tulane University (HL072274), University of Iowa (HL072028), University of Maryland (HL072359), University of Minnesota (HL072072), University of North Carolina (HL072355), University of Oklahoma (HL072283), University of Pennsylvania (HL072346), University of Pittsburgh (HL072331), and the Blood Center of Wisconsin (HL072290).

Dr. Slichter reports receiving grant support from U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (Department of Defense), Navigant Biotechnologies, and Pall Medical; Dr. Assmann, receiving grant support from Z-Medica; Dr. Triulzi, receiving consulting fees from Fenwal Laboratories and Cerus and lecture fees from Pall; Dr. Strauss, receiving consulting fees from CaridianBCT; Dr. Ness, receiving consulting fees from Fenwal Laboratories and CaridianBCT; Dr. Brecher, receiving consulting fees from Fenwal Laboratories; Dr. Josephson, receiving lecture fees from Mediware; Dr. George, receiving consulting fees and grant support from Amgen; and Dr. Manno, receiving consulting fees and grant support from Baxter Healthcare, consulting fees from Bayer Healthcare, and lecture fees from EMD Healthcare Communications Scientific Communication Group.

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

We thank all the patients who volunteered to take part in this study, all the study investigators and committee members, and Ginny Knight at the Puget Sound Blood Center for administrative assistance.

Source Information

From the Puget Sound Blood Center and University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle (S.J.S., T.B.G.); Brigham and Women's Hospital (R.M.K.), Children's Hospital Boston (S.R.S.), and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (L.U.) — all in Boston; New England Research Institutes, Watertown, MA (S.F.A., S.G.); Fairview–University Medical Center, Minneapolis (J.M.); University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh (D.J.T.); University of Iowa, Iowa City (R.G.S.); Johns Hopkins University (P.M.N.) and University of Maryland (J.R.H.) — both in Baltimore; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (M.E.B.); Emory University, Atlanta (C.D.J., C.D.H.); University of Pennsylvania (B.A.K.) and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (C.S.M.) — both in Philadelphia; Blood Center of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison (R.D.W., J.G.M.); Duke University, Durham, NC (T.L.O.); Weill College of Cornell University, New York (D.L.S.); Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland (K.R.M.); University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (J.N.G.); University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas (V.M.A.); and Tulane University Hospital and Clinics, New Orleans (C.L.).

Address reprint requests to Dr. Slichter at Puget Sound Blood Center, 921 Terry Ave., Seattle, WA 98104-1256, or at .

Appendix

The following investigators and staff participated in the study: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland: K.R. McCrae (principal investigator), V. Exum, D. Hendrix; BloodCenter of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison: J.G. McFarland (principal investigator), R.D. Woodson, N. Ruys, J. Werndli, K. Koenig, N. Turman, J. Stublaski; Froedert Memorial Lutheran Hospital, Milwaukee: M. Lankiewicz, D. Miller-Metcalfe, S. Graminske, R. Dora, S. Heldke; St. Luke's Medical Center, Milwaukee: A.B. Divgi, J. Boos, S. Beekman; Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee: R. Punzalan; Children's Hospital Boston, Boston: E.J. Neufeld (principal investigator), S.R. Sloan, T. Kang, J. Hedstrom, K. Harney; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston: L. Uhl, B. Malynn; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston: R.M. Kaufman, M. Kelly, B. Rowe, K. Wallace, S. Slate; Weill College of Cornell University, New York: J. Bussel (principal investigator), D.L. Skerrett, E. Feldman, C. Nguyen, J. Cruz, M. Wissert; Duke University, Durham, NC: T.L. Ortel (principal investigator), S. Adams, T. Anderson, C. Higgins, C. Mette, E. Petzold, C. Pinaroc, C. Thornburg, M.J. Telen; Emory University, Atlanta: C.D. Hillyer (principal investigator), C.D. Josephson, M.-I. Castillejo, J. Newman, J. Ieong, J. Johnson; Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore: P.M. Ness (principal investigator), R. Case, A. Fuller, A.K. Fuller; Puget Sound Blood Center and University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle: S.J. Slichter (principal investigator), T.B. Gernsheimer, A. Deyle, J. Corson, A. Hirata; Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle: D. Aboulafia; Children's Hospital Medical Center, Seattle: D. Matthews; Tulane University Hospital and Clinics, New Orleans: C. Leissinger (principal investigator), R. Kruse-Jarres, H. Safah, C. Schmidt; University of Iowa, Iowa City: R.G. Strauss (principal investigator), B. Link, T. Raife, J. Swift, D. Schrock; University of Maryland, Baltimore: J.R. Hess (principal investigator), M. Mitrou, J. Spanfelner; Fairview–University Medical Center, Minneapolis: J. McCullough (principal investigator), T. Carr, T. Chlebeck, S. Malcolm, S. Pulkrabek; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill: M.E. Brecher (principal investigator), A. Tsui, M. Miller, S. Hay; University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City: J.N. George (principal investigator), D. Terrell, X. Li; University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas: G. Buchanan (principal investigator), V.M. Aquino, J. Cox, T. Hoffman, G. Paranjape; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia: B.A. Konkle (principal investigator), E.A. Stadtmauer, I. Tarng, M. Kelty, M. Einarson, K. Hinkle; Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia: C.S. Manno (principal investigator), A. Parker, A. Wade, J. Nathanson, M. Braun; University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh: D.J. Triulzi (principal investigator), P. D'Andrea, L. Blanker; Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH: J. AuBuchon (medical monitor); New England Research Institutes (Data Coordinating Center), Watertown, MA: S.F. Assmann (principal investigator), D. Brambilla, A.S. Corbett, E. Devlin, J. Erickson, E. Gerstenberger, S. Granger, K. Hayes, J. Miller, J. Scott; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD: G. Nemo (project officer), S. Glynn, L. Harvath, E. Leifer, T. Mondoro, E. Wagner; Data and Safety Monitoring Board: S. Geyer, T. Lane, J. Lusher, B. McLeod, A. Reitsma, P. Roberson, A. Shapiro, C. Whitsett.

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Citing Articles (57)

Citing Articles

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    William Riley, Benjamin Smalley, Shelley Pulkrabek, Mary E. Clay, Jeffrey McCullough. (2012) Using lean techniques to define the platelet (PLT) transfusion process and cost-effectiveness to evaluate PLT dose transfusion strategies. Transfusionno-no
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    Matthew Karafin, Alice K. Fuller, William J. Savage, Karen E. King, Paul M. Ness, Aaron A.R. Tobian. (2012) The impact of apheresis platelet manipulation on corrected count increment. Transfusionno-no
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    Patrick F. Fogarty, Michael D. Tarantino, Andres Brainsky, James Signorovitch, Kelly M. Grotzinger. (2012) Selective validation of the WHO Bleeding Scale in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia. Current Medical Research and Opinion 28:1, 79-87
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    N. Tynngård, M. Trinks, G. Berlin. (2012) In vitro quality of platelets during prolonged storage after washing with three platelet additive solutions. Vox Sanguinis 102:1, 32-39
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    Reid K. Nakamura, Emily Tompkins, Domenico Bianco. (2012) Therapeutic options for immune-mediated thrombocytopenia. Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Caren/a-n/a
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    2011. Clinical Uses of Blood Components. , 238-304.
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    C. N. Morrell. (2011) Immunomodulatory Mediators in Platelet Transfusion Reactions. Hematology 2011:1, 470-474
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    Nancy M. Heddle, Cynthia Wu, Ralph Vassallo, Patricia Carey, Donald Arnold, Miguel Lozano, Katerina Pavenski, Joseph Sweeney, Simon Stanworth, Yang Liu, Aicha Traore, Rebecca Barty, Alan Tinmouth, . (2011) Adjudicating bleeding events in a platelet dose study: impact on outcome results and challenges. Transfusion 51:11, 2304-2310
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    Sherrill J. Slichter. (2011) New thoughts on the correct dosing of prophylactic platelet transfusions to prevent bleeding. Current Opinion in Hematology 18:6, 427-435
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    B. PSAILA, J. B. BUSSEL, A. L. FRELINGER, B. BABULA, M. D. LINDEN, Y. LI, M. R. BARNARD, C. TATE, E. J. FELDMAN, A. D. MICHELSON. (2011) Differences in platelet function in patients with acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplasia compared to equally thrombocytopenic patients with immune thrombocytopenia. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 9:11, 2302-2310
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    M.U. Heim. (2011) Blut, Blutkomponenten und Plasmaderivate. Medizinische Klinik 106:3, 183-188
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    Donald M. Arnold, Wendy Lim. (2011) A Rational Approach to the Diagnosis and Management of Thrombocytopenia in the Hospitalized Patient. Seminars in Hematology 48:4, 251-258
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    Laura Infanti, Christine Stebler, Shabahang Job, Morven Ruesch, Alois Gratwohl, Johannes Irsch, Lily Lin, Andreas Buser. (2011) Pathogen-inactivation of platelet components with the INTERCEPT Blood System™: A cohort study. Transfusion and Apheresis Science 45:2, 175-181
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    E. C. Vamvakas. (2011) Meta-analysis of the studies of bleeding complications of platelets pathogen-reduced with the Intercept system. Vox Sanguinisno-no
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    G. Andreu. (2011) Réduction de pathogènes des concentrés de plaquettes : techniques existantes et en développement. Transfusion Clinique et Biologique 18:4, 444-462
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    C. E. Butler, E. L. Dickens. (2011) Transfusion tomorrow: Royal College of Pathologists, November 2010. Transfusion Medicine 21:4, 224-230
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    Lise J. Estcourt, S. J. Stanworth, M. F. Murphy. (2011) Platelet transfusions for patients with haematological malignancies: who needs them?. British Journal of Haematology 154:4, 425-440
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    G. Canellini, J.-B. Wasserfallen, J.-D. Tissot. (2011) Inactivation des pathogènes des produits sanguins labiles : entre enjeux financiers et conséquences possibles à long terme. Transfusion Clinique et Biologique 18:4, 493-497
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    Aaron A.R. Tobian, William J. Savage, Daniel J. Tisch, Sandra Thoman, Karen E. King, Paul M. Ness. (2011) Prevention of allergic transfusion reactions to platelets and red blood cells through plasma reduction. Transfusion 51:8, 1676-1683
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    John B. Holcomb, Lee A. Zarzabal, Joel E. Michalek, Rosemary A. Kozar, Phillip C. Spinella, Jeremy G. Perkins, Nena Matijevic, Jing-Fei Dong, Shibani Pati, Charles E. Wade. (2011) Increased Platelet:RBC Ratios Are Associated With Improved Survival After Massive Transfusion. The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care 71, S318-S328
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    T. B. Gernsheimer. (2011) Platelet transfusion in the 21st century: where we’ve been and where we’re going. ISBT Science Series 6:1, 245-248
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    Alice K. Fuller, Kristin M. Uglik, Hayden G. Braine, Karen E. King. (2011) A comprehensive program to minimize platelet outdating. Transfusion 51:7, 1469-1476
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    Susanne M. Picker. (2011) In-vitro assessment of platelet function. Transfusion and Apheresis Science 44:3, 305-319
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    Paolo Perseghin. (2011) High concentration plasma-reduced plateletapheresis concentrates. Transfusion and Apheresis Science 44:3, 273-276
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    Laurence Corash. (2011) The hemostatic efficacy of platelet components prepared with pathogen inactivation. Transfusion 51:6, 1355-1356
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    Torunn O. Apelseth, Tor Hervig, Øystein Bruserud. (2011) Current practice and future directions for optimization of platelet transfusions in patients with severe therapy-induced cytopenia. Blood Reviews 25:3, 113-122
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    Laurence Corash, Claire D. Sherman. (2011) Evaluation of platelet transfusion clinical trials. British Journal of Haematology 153:4, 529-531
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    Miguel Lozano, Folke Knutson, René Tardivel, Joan Cid, Rosa Maria Maymó, Helena Löf, Huw Roddie, Jane Pelly, Anthony Docherty, Claire Sherman, Lily Lin, Meisa Propst, Laurence Corash, Chris Prowse. (2011) A multi-centre study of therapeutic efficacy and safety of platelet components treated with amotosalen and ultraviolet A pathogen inactivation stored for 6 or 7 d prior to transfusion. British Journal of Haematology 153:3, 393-401
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    Eleftherios C. Vamvakas. (2011) Meta-analysis of the randomized controlled trials of the hemostatic efficacy and capacity of pathogen-reduced platelets. Transfusion 51:5, 1058-1071
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    Jean-Louis H. Kerkhoffs. (2011) Evaluation of platelet transfusion clinical trials - response to Corash & Sherman. British Journal of Haematology 153:4, 531-532
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    Majed A. Refaai, Richard P. Phipps, Sherry L. Spinelli, Neil Blumberg. (2011) Platelet transfusions: Impact on hemostasis, thrombosis, inflammation and clinical outcomes. Thrombosis Research 127:4, 287-291
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    Cassandra D. Josephson, Simone A. Glynn, Steve H. Kleinman, Morris A. Blajchman. (2011) A multidisciplinary “think tank”: the top 10 clinical trial opportunities in transfusion medicine from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-sponsored 2009 state-of-the-science symposium. Transfusion 51:4, 828-841
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    Jill L. Sondeen, M. Dale Prince, Bijan S. Kheirabadi, Charles E. Wade, I. Amy Polykratis, Rodolfo de Guzman, Michael A. Dubick. (2011) Initial resuscitation with plasma and other blood components reduced bleeding compared to hetastarch in anesthetized swine with uncontrolled splenic hemorrhage. Transfusion 51:4, 779-792
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    Nancy M. Heddle, Donald M. Arnold, Kathryn E. Webert. (2011) Time to rethink clinically important outcomes in platelet transfusion trials. Transfusion 51:2, 430-434
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    Donald M. Arnold. (2011) Bias in transfusion research: from study design to result reporting. Transfusion 51:2, 237-240
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    Albert Farrugia. (2011) Falsification or paradigm shift? Toward a revision of the common sense of transfusion. Transfusion 51:1, 216-224
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    Krista JM Stibbe, Hajo IJ Wildschut, Pieternella J Lugtenburg. (2011) Management of aplastic anemia in a woman during pregnancy: a case report. Journal of Medical Case Reports 5:1, 66
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    Johannes Irsch, Lily Lin. (2011) Pathogen Inactivation of Platelet and Plasma Blood Components for Transfusion Using the INTERCEPT Blood System<sup>TM</sup>. Transfusion Medicine and Hemotherapy 38:1, 19-31
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    J McCullough. 2011. Transfusion medicine for pathologists. , 619-639.
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    Hau C Kwaan, Timothy Huyck. (2010) Thromboembolic and bleeding complications in acute leukemia. Expert Review of Hematology 3:6, 719-730
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    Marcela Contreras, Clare PF Taylor, John A Barbara. 2010. Clinical Blood Transfusion. , 268-299.
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    D.C. Buhrkuhl. (2010) An update on platelet transfusion in hematooncology supportive care. Transfusion 50:10, 2266-2276
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    Morris A. Blajchman, Simone A. Glynn, Cassandra D. Josephson, Steve H. Kleinman. (2010) Clinical Trial Opportunities in Transfusion Medicine: Proceedings of a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute State-of-the-Science Symposium. Transfusion Medicine Reviews 24:4, 259-285
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    A. Farrugia, J. Penrod, J. M. Bult. (2010) Payment, compensation and replacement - the ethics and motivation of blood and plasma donation. Vox Sanguinis 99:3, 202-211
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    Chris V. Prowse, William G. Murphy. (2010) Kills 99% of known germs. Transfusion 50:8, 1636-1639
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    Eleftherios C. Vamvakas, Morris A. Blajchman. (2010) Blood Still Kills: Six Strategies to Further Reduce Allogeneic Blood Transfusion-Related Mortality. Transfusion Medicine Reviews 24:2, 77-124
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