Can We Chill Platelets As Well As Wine?
By Lawrence Tim Goodnough, M.D.
Platelets are better served at room temperature than when refrigerated — this has long been
recommended because refrigerated platelets disappear rapidly from blood after transfusion. This
accelerated platelet clearance has been ascribed to platelet shape changes with platelet chilling. In the
Scientific Committee on Transfusion Medicine session chaired by Dr. Walter Dzik of Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH), Dr. Tom Stossel, also of MGH, describes recent work that indicates that
there is no relationship between platelet shape and platelet clearances; rather, chilling platelets
causes CP1b± clusters, resulting in removal of the platelets by phagocytosis. Further work reveals
that covering exposed acetylglucosamine residues with a galactose in a 1,4 linkage prevents such
phagocytosis in a mouse model. Galactosylation does not impair platelet function by in vitro
measurements, and by monitoring lectin binding to platelets, has been shown to be stable over two
weeks of refrigeration. For these reasons, platelets galactosylation appears to be simple and practical,
and thus a possible alternative platelet storage to the currently approved process of seven day platelet
storage at room temperature.
Related glycobiology presentations in the Scientific Committee on Transfusion Medicine
session (held 10:15 a.m. – 12:00 noon today and 9:45 – 11:30 a.m. tomorrow) include a talk by Dr.
Martin Olsson highlighting the glycobiology of the red blood cell – and attempts to modify blood
group carbohydrate residues with the aim to provide an ABO-universal blood supply, and a
presentation by Dr. Megan Sykes, who discusses the potential role of mixed chimerism for
surmounting current barriers to xenotransplantation.
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