In vitro cell quality of buffy coat platelets in additive solution treated with pathogen reduction technology

Transfusion. 2010 Oct;50(10):2210-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1537-2995.2010.02681.x. Epub 2010 Oct 4.

Abstract

Background: Pathogen reduction technologies (PRTs) may induce storage lesion in platelet (PLT) concentrates. To investigate this, buffy coat PLTs (BCPs) in PLT additive solution (AS; SSP+) with or without Mirasol PRT (CaridianBCT Biotechnologies) were assessed by quality control tests and four-color flow cytometry.

Study design and methods: In vitro comparison of PRT and control pooled-and-split BCPs after 2, 3, 6, 7, and 8 days of storage was made. PLT concentration, count per unit, swirl, metabolism, activation (CD62P, PAC1, CD42b/GPIb, CD63, CD40L/CD154, CD40, annexin V), and microparticle, sCD40L, and sCD62P release were evaluated.

Results: PRT induced a minor initial PLT loss (Day 2 [mean±SD], 302×10(9) ±44×10(9) PLTs/unit vs. 325× 10(9) ±46×10(9) PLTs/unit; p<0.001) but the decline was comparable to control BCP. Swirling was comparable and declined with similar rates in PRT-treated and control BCPs during storage. PRT enhanced PLT metabolism and activation, evidenced by lower pH(22) ; increased glucose consumption and lactate production rates (p<0.01); early increases in CD62P-, PAC1-, CD63-, CD40L-, CD40-, and annexin V-positive PLTs; reduced GPIb expression; and enhanced release of PLT-derived MPs and sCD40L (all p<0.05). CD62P and PAC1 expression changed with different kinetics during storage and varying GPIb expression was displayed within the CD62P/PAC1-positive PLT subsets.

Conclusion: PRT treatment of BCP in AS induced a minor initial PLT loss and enhanced metabolism and PLT activation. The clinical relevance for PLT function in vivo of these findings will be investigated in a clinical trial.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Blood Buffy Coat / cytology*
  • Blood Platelets / cytology*
  • Blood Platelets / microbiology
  • Blood Platelets / radiation effects
  • Blood Preservation / methods*
  • Blood-Borne Pathogens / radiation effects
  • Flow Cytometry
  • Humans
  • Photosensitizing Agents / chemistry
  • Riboflavin / chemistry
  • Ultraviolet Rays

Substances

  • Photosensitizing Agents
  • Riboflavin