Management of anticoagulation-associated toxicity during large-volume leukapheresis of peripheral blood stem cell donors.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Management of anticoagulation-associated toxicity during large-volume leukapheresis of peripheral blood stem cell donors We write to direct attention to the management of anticoagulation-associated toxicity during large-volume leukapheresis (LVL), a potential source of donor morbidity as described in a recent comprehensive report comparing experiences during marrow and peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) donation. 1 PBSCs are collected from donors during LVL by the process of apheresis. 2 During apheresis, anticoagulation is necessary to prevent coagulation and clumping of the collected component. The most frequently utilized apheresis anticoagulant is citrate, which is returned to the donor at a rate that depends on the whole blood processing rate and the ratio of citrate anticoagulant to whole blood. 3 The use of citrate-mediated anticoagulation in the apheresis device does not result in systemic anticoagulation due to metabolism and redistribution of citrate in the donor circulation. 3,4 Modest but significant elevations in serum citrate levels, however, frequently occur in apheresis donors, who may experience symptoms associated with decreased ionized calcium levels resulting from formation of calcium-citrate complexes. 3 The establishment of standard citrate administration rates for plateletpheresis has resulted in procedures that are generally well tolerated. 3,5 But during much longer LVL procedures, blood citrate accumulation may eventually outpace metabolism when citrate is administered at rates used during plateletpheresis, resulting in markedly decreased ionized calcium levels and severe donor symptoms. 6 There is no single standard method to reduce citrate toxicity during LVL. One approach to this problem is to combine heparin administration with a reduced citrate infusion rate, thus limiting the amount of citrate returned to the donor while providing anticoagu-lation during apheresis. But heparin administration may also be associated with toxicity, 4 and the single serious adverse event that occurred in a donor during PBSC collection in the study by Rowley et al was the development of a large painful hematoma associated with use of a femoral catheter for central venous access and heparin administration. 1 Whether this adverse event was caused solely by the use of heparin cannot be established, but administration of 1000 to 2000 units of heparin per hour over several hours of LVL could produce systemic anticoagulation of a degree that might warrant delay in removal of a central venous catheter or require additional monitoring. 4,7 An alternative method to reduce the toxicity associated with administration of large quantities of citrate during LVL is to balance the citrate required …
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Blood
دوره 99 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2002