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1 A Therapeutic Platelet Strategy Journal Club – Feb 21, 2007 Kristine Roland MD FRCPC TM Resident, UBC.

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Presentation on theme: "1 A Therapeutic Platelet Strategy Journal Club – Feb 21, 2007 Kristine Roland MD FRCPC TM Resident, UBC."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 A Therapeutic Platelet Strategy Journal Club – Feb 21, 2007 Kristine Roland MD FRCPC TM Resident, UBC

2 2 Context  Prophylactic plt transfusion strategies for thrombocytopenic pts are standard practice  The appropriate plt count ‘trigger’ has evolved: - Gaydos et al, NEJM 1962: observed that serious bleeding in pts with acute leukemia rare when plts > 20 x 10 9 /L - Numerous studies indicate threshold of 10 x 10 9 /L is safe: Heckman KD et al, J Clin Oncol 1997 Rebulla P et al, NEJM 1997 Zumberg MS et al, Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2002 Callow CR et al, Br J Haematol 2002

3 3 Context  Does reducing the trigger from 20 to 10 improve plt utilization? - Hersh et al 1998: mathematical modeling predicts a 14.5% decrease in plt utilization -Rebulla  21.5% reduction in plt usage Heckman  35% fewer transfusions (not significant) Callow  36% reduction (compared to retrospective) Zumberg  no difference

4 4 Context  Other factors impact utilization: frequency of checking plt counts, development of additional risk factors for bleeding, compliance with guidelines  Two studies in the recent issue of Transfusion (Feb 2007) report poorer than expected compliance with prophylactic thresholds: - Greeno et al – overall 28% compliance (up to 43% on Heme/Onc service) - Cameron et al – overall 22% compliance (and reasons for non-compliance were poorly documented)

5 5 Context Mark Brecher editorial (Transfusion Feb 2007):  If goal is to reduce plt utilization, other approaches may need to be investigated - Lower plt doses (PLADO study underway) - Employing a therapeutic strategy vs the prophylactic strategy …

6 6 The Study: A therapeutic platelet transfusion strategy is safe and feasible in patients after autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation Wandt H et al Bone Marrow Transplantation (2006) 37:387-392  Objective: “ assess the safety and feasibility of a therapeutic platelet transfusion strategy”

7 7 Population  Single-centre study from Germany  106 pts prospectively enrolled after 2001  Adults undergoing autologous PBSCT - range 18-70 years, median 54 years - male: female 2:1 - MM (43%), lymphoma (32%), acute leukemia (16%), solid tumour (8%) - total of 140 transplant procedures (76 pts received 1 transplant; 30 received 2 or 3) - 87 pts received chemo; 19 pts received chemo +TBI  Exclusion criteria: AL-amyloid, aspergillus infxn, cerebral lesion, prior life-threatening bleeding during chemo

8 8 Intervention  daily morning plt counts  twice daily clinical exam for hemorrhage  therapeutic platelet transfusion if bleeding WHO ≥ grade II*  prophylactic platelet transfusion if plt < 10 x 10 9 /L and unstable †  all plts were ABO-compatible apheresis LR  PRBC transfusion to maintain Hb > 80g/L

9 Grade 0None Grade IPetechial Grade IIMild blood loss Grade IIIGross blood loss Grade IVDebilitating blood loss † Definition of clinically unstable: Fever > 38.5 C Suspicious for aspergillus infection Sepsis Coagulation disorder Planned surgery (goal plt count > 20) *WHO Bleeding

10 10 Matched pair analysis  Retrospectively reviewed 60 transplant procedures matched for the first 60 procedures in the prospective cohort  Matched for: gender, Dx, conditioning  These historical patients would have received prophylactic platelet transfusions routinely for morning plt < 10 x 10 9 /L

11 Prospective 60 transplants (50 pts) Retrospective 60 transplants (54 pts) Median age Age range 55 18-67 49 17-61 Female to male21:2925:29 MM or lymphoma Acute leukemia Solid tumour 41 10 9 41 10 9 TBI conditioning55 Table 4: Retrospective Analysis Not compared statistically

12 12 Results – Bleeding Of the 140 prospective transplant procedures: - 114 (81%) no bleeding - 28 (20%) WHO grade I - 26 (19%) WHO grade II (mainly epistaxis, mucositis) Of the 60 retrospective matched transplants: - 20% WHO grade II - 1% WHO grade III No. of thrombocytopenic days: plts < 20plts < 10 6 (0-92)3 (0-62)

13 13 Results – Transfusions 48 (34%) of 140 transplants could be performed without a plt transfusion. Of the total 235 plt units that were transfused:  81 therapeutic vs 154 prophylactic - main indications for prophylactic were fever and septicemia - but 27% of transfusions given for no clear reason

14 14 Analysis by Dx and conditioning MM other 47% 22% P < 0.05 Non-TBI TBI 37% 0% P < 0.05 Percentage of transplants (n = 140) NOT requiring platelet transfusion TBI associated with increased mucositis-related bleeding Mann-Whitney U-test

15 15 Results – Transfusions Prospective cohort (60 transplants) Retrospective matched cohort (60 transplants) Total plt transfusions 111237 Range Mean Median 0-18 1.9 1 0-27 4 3 Therefore the therapeutic strategy reduced total transfusions by ~50% Comparison with 60 historical transplants: No statistical analysis

16 16 Authors’ conclusions  A therapeutic plt transfusion strategy is safe in autologous PBSCT patients - No major bleeding (WHO grade III or IV) - Only 19% minor bleeding (WHO grade II)  A therapeutic strategy reduces the total number of plt transfusions compared to a prophylactic strategy  Pts treated with TBI conditioning regimens more likely to require plt transfusion

17 17 Critical Appraisal  Was there randomization? - No; prospective observational cohort (n=140) and a smaller cohort (n=60) of matched historical transplants  Was follow-up complete? - In the prospective cohort, pts followed until plt count > 20 for 2-3 consecutive days - No pts lost after enrolment  Was there blinding? - No; treating physicians needed to be aware of plt transfusion protocol - Bleeding recorded by responsible physician and reviewed by one of the authors (HW or KS)

18 18 Critical Appraisal  Were the two groups matched? - First 60 transplants matched for gender, Dx, and TBI conditioning but prospective cohort slightly older (mean 55 vs 49) – no p value given - presumably the two groups were treated similarly except for plt transfusion strategy  Outcomes - Not clear whether all the outcomes reported were predefined at start of study - e.g. # of transfusions related to Dx and conditioning – was this posthoc analysis? Was study powered to detect differences?

19 19 Critical Appraisal  Can results be applied to patient care? - Applies to adults undergoing autologous PBSCT - This study used only LR apheresis plts - Pts with prior life-threatening bleeding were excluded, and 34% of all transplants were performed without transfusions – was this a lower risk pt population?  Were all important outcomes considered? - Safety: bleeding complications and number of thrombocytopenic days - no mention of days in hospital or overall mortality - Plt utilization: reduced number of plt transfusions compared to historical controls - significant rate of off-protocol transfusions

20 20 ASH 2006: Abstract #577 Oral Session Interim analysis of a prospective randomised study comparing a therapeutic platelet transfusion strategy with the prophylactic platelet transfusion standard in patients after autologous peripheral stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Schaefer-Eckart K, Wendelin K, Wilhelm M, Mahlknecht MU, Conradi R, Schaich M, Leimer L, Wandt H.

21 21 Interim Analysis  Prospective randomised study started 2005  Multicentre  Plan to enrol 200 pts  Prophylactic arm: receive plts if morning plt < 10  Therapeutic arm: stable pts receive plts only for clinically relevant bleeding  Apheresis or pooled platelet units Prophylactic (n=45) Therapeutic (n=47) Days plts < 1063110 Days in hospital1514 Minor bleeding4 (8.9%)9 (19.2%) Transfused units6837 NS p<0.005

22 22 THE END Thank you! Comments and questions …


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