Background
Patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) often experience thrombocytopenia. Causes of thrombocytopenia include loss of platelets resulting from hemorrhage, dilution resulting from fluid resuscitation, consumption resulting from platelet adhesion to the vascular wall or extracorporeal devices, and insufficient production resulting from hematopoietic disease or adverse drug effects [
1‐
3]. To manage thrombocytopenia, it is important to identify and eliminate its causes and, if necessary, transfuse platelets to stabilize hemostasis and hemodynamics.
Practice criteria for platelet transfusion are controversial. Platelets may be transfused to patients with thrombocytopenia during treatment of hematopoietic disease, before insertion of a central venous catheter, before diagnostic lumbar puncture, and before surgery. Practice criteria are not standardized and depend to a large extent on the circumstances mentioned above [
4‐
8]. Randomized controlled trials comparing patients with hematopoietic disease who received prophylactic platelet transfusion when platelets fell to < 10,000/μL with those who received platelet transfusion after bleeding symptoms appeared found that the former group underwent transfusions more frequently. However, these patients experienced fewer bleeding events, suggesting the benefit of prophylactic platelet transfusion [
9‐
11]. The frequency of bleeding events in patients with hematopoietic malignancies does not significantly differ when the trigger value for platelet transfusion is 10,000/μL versus 20,000/μL [
12‐
14]; therefore, a platelet count of 10,000/μL has been proposed as the transfusion trigger value. However, platelet counts do not significantly correlate with bleeding events [
15], suggesting that indicators more closely related to bleeding symptoms may be more appropriate for assessing the need for platelet transfusion.
Thromboelastometry and multiplate impedance aggregometry are widely used for analyzing hemostatic function. Thromboelastometry, which monitors changes in the viscoelasticity of whole blood during formation of the fibrin clot, is mainly used to evaluate hemostatic function during cardiovascular surgery [
16‐
18]. Multiplate impedance aggregometry, which monitors the increase in electrical resistance between electrodes caused by platelet aggregation, is used to evaluate the efficacy of antiplatelet drugs [
19‐
21]. These methods are employed worldwide as point-of-care hemostatic function tests using whole blood. However, the ability of these tests to evaluate hemostatic function in patients with thrombocytopenia and to determine the requirements for platelet transfusion have not been established.
We developed the Total Thrombus-formation Analysis System (T-TAS), which comprehensively evaluates hemostatic function under conditions similar to those of thrombus formation in vivo [
22]. The T-TAS monitors the elevation in flow pressure, which reflects the growth of a platelet- and fibrin-rich thrombus in the flow chamber, which is embedded in an analytical chip. Recent studies have suggested that T-TAS values are a significant predictor of bleeding events [
23,
24]. However, as with other conventional hemostatic function tests, the analytical conditions of the T-TAS are not suitable for evaluating hemostatic function in patients with thrombocytopenia. Here we developed analytical conditions suitable for the evaluation of hemostatic function of low-platelet samples by adjusting the depth of the T-TAS flow chamber. We further determined how the values acquired with the modified T-TAS were related to bleeding symptoms as well as the effects of platelet transfusion in patients with thrombocytopenia.
Methods
Blood sampling
This single-center observational study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Kagoshima University Hospital (approval no. 170178–2). The study was conducted in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki, and written informed consent to participate was obtained from patients or their close relatives. We included 10 adult patients admitted to the ICU of Kagoshima University Hospital between November 2017 and October 2019 who required a platelet transfusion. We excluded patients administered drugs that affect the hemostatic system, such as antiplatelet agents or anticoagulants. The use of anticoagulants for the maintenance of arterial lines or extracorporeal devices was permitted. The need for platelet transfusion was determined in accordance with our standard clinical practice, independent of the present study.
Blood was drawn from the radial arterial line before and after platelet transfusion. The samples were anticoagulated with EDTA (Becton Dickinson Co., Fukushima, Japan), 3.2% sodium citrate (Terumo, Tokyo, Japan), or hirudin (Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Mannheim, Germany) and were used for blood cell counts, thromboelastometry, T-TAS, and multiplate aggregometry. After platelet transfusion, platelet concentrates remaining in the transfusion tube were collected and analyzed for their thrombogenic potential.
Assessment of bleeding scale
Before platelet transfusion, bleeding symptoms were assessed with the modified WHO bleeding scale [
4]. Grades 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 corresponded to minimum, minor, moderate, severe, and debilitating bleeding, respectively. Patients were divided into two groups according to their bleeding scale before platelet transfusion: the minor bleeding group, which included patients with a bleeding grade ≤ 1, and the major bleeding group, which included patients with a grade ≥ 2.
Laboratory tests
Platelet counts were measured with an XN-9000 automated blood cell analyzer (Sysmex, Kobe, Japan). General coagulation tests, including measurement of prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), and fibrinogen, were performed with the Automated Coagulation System-CP3000 (Sekisui Medical, Tokyo, Japan) or a STACIA (LSI Medience, Tokyo, Japan).
Rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM)
Blood anticoagulated with sodium citrate was used for ROTEM (Instrumentation Laboratory). Tissue factor-induced blood coagulation (EXTEM) and ellagic acid-induced blood coagulation (INTEM) were analyzed with ROTEM according to the protocol recommended by the manufacturer, and clotting time and maximum clot firmness were evaluated.
Multiple electrode aggregometry
Blood anticoagulated with hirudin was used for multiple electrode aggregometry with a Multiplate Analyzer (Roche). Platelet aggregation induced by collagen, adenosine diphosphate (ADP), thrombin receptor activating peptide-6 (TRAP-6), or ristocetin was analyzed according to the protocol recommended by the manufacturer, and the area under the curve (AUC) was evaluated.
T-TAS analysis
Blood anticoagulated with sodium citrate was used for T-TAS analysis (Fujimori Kogyo, Tokyo, Japan). Calcium chloride and corn trypsin inhibitor were added at the start of the measurement. In some experiments, platelet concentrates (240 μL) mixed with pooled normal plasma (240 μL) (George King Bio-Medical, Inc., Overland Park, KS, USA) and a reagent mix (20 μL) containing calcium chloride, corn trypsin inhibitor, aprotinin, and heparan sulfate were used for T-TAS analysis to evaluate the hemostatic function of platelet concentrates. Thrombus formation in the flow chamber, which was coated with tissue factor and collagen, was analyzed according to the protocol recommended by the manufacturer, and occlusion time and the AUC were evaluated. For the analysis of low-platelet samples, newly developed flow chambers (width, 300 μm; depth, 60 μm or 50 μm) were used instead of conventional flow chambers (width, 300 μm; depth, 80 μm). The flow rate was set at 10 μL/min, which corresponds to initial wall shear rates of approximately 1500, 1100, and 600 s
− 1 in the 50-, 60-, and 80-μm-deep chambers, respectively. The intra-assay coefficient of variation of the AUC was 1.24% when using conventional flow chambers and whole blood from healthy volunteers [
25] .
Immunofluorescence analysis of flow chambers
Immediately after the T-TAS analysis, immunofluorescence analysis was performed to determine the composition of thrombi formed in the flow chamber [
22]. Platelets in unfixed thrombi were labeled with FITC-conjugated mouse anti-human CD41 IgG (Beckman Coulter, Miami, FL, USA) for 15 min in the dark. After fixation with OptiLyse C (Beckman Coulter), fibrin (ogen) was detected by using rabbit anti-human fibrinogen IgG (Dako, Tokyo, Japan) labeled with Alexa Fluor 594 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) for 30 min in the dark. The nuclei of leukocytes were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (Dojindo, Kumamoto, Japan). The entire image of thrombi formed in the flow chamber was analyzed with a BZ-X700 All-in-One Fluorescence Microscope (Keyence Corp., Osaka, Japan). Although fibrin generation could continue until fixation with OptiLyse C, this had little impact on the results.
Statistical analysis
The significance of differences between the major and minor bleeding groups was evaluated with the Student t test. The significance of differences before versus after platelet transfusion was evaluated with the paired t test. Relationships between hemostatic function test values were evaluated with Pearson’s correlation coefficients and P values. All statistical analyses were performed with IBM SPSS version 23 (Armonk, NY, USA), and a P value < 0.05 was considered to indicate a significant difference.
Discussion
The major findings of this study are as follows. (1) We developed modified T-TAS HD chips suitable for quantitatively evaluating hemostatic function in patients with thrombocytopenia. (2) T-TAS HD chips discriminated between hemostatic function of the major and minor bleeding groups. (3) T-TAS HD chips detected the recovery of hemostatic function following platelet transfusion. (4) The recovery of hemostatic function following platelet transfusion may depend on the function of transfused platelets, rather than the count. The advantages of T-TAS HD chips do not necessarily suggest that the T-TAS is superior to conventional hemostatic function tests, such as those obtained with the Multiplate Analyzer and ROTEM, because suitable analytical conditions for low-platelet samples are indispensable, not only for the T-TAS but also for the Multiplate Analyzer and ROTEM.
It is important to determine whether evaluation of hemostatic function with the T-TAS supports clinical decision-making. For example, the ability of the T-TAS to indicate the need for platelet transfusion should be clarified in the future. Answering this critically important clinical question requires prospective investigation of how the frequency of bleeding events and platelet transfusion differ when criteria based on the T-TAS versus platelet counts are applied. Such interventional studies may not be approved at this time because insufficient data are available to ensure that the T-TAS may be safely used to make clinical decisions. We therefore consider that the present study is a first step in this direction.
Efficient hemostasis requires sufficient numbers of functional platelets as well as coagulation factors [
26,
27]. If platelet function is compromised, hemostasis is impaired regardless of platelet count. For example, the platelet counts in patients #8 and #10 were similar, although the thrombogenicity of the former was low according to T-TAS data, and bleeding symptoms were apparent. The risk of bleeding might be more accurately evaluated with a comprehensive analysis of hemostatic function using the T-TAS. This might be an advantage of the T-TAS in comparison with specific tests targeting platelets or coagulation function.
The recovery of thrombogenic potential after platelet transfusion was confirmed in most patients, with the exception of patient #9. Table
3 indicates that patients with a low AUC of the T-TAS after platelet transfusion required additional platelet transfusion within the next few days. Thus, the platelet transfusion in patient #9 on day 1 might have had limited effectiveness. This finding might have resulted partly from the relatively low function of the transfused platelets and the fact that the background disease did not allow recovery of platelet count in this patient.
The 10 patients tested in the present study had different underlying diseases. It is important to consider whether the cut-off values must be changed according to the underlying disease when making clinical decisions. Although it is possible that thrombogenic potential can be uniformly determined with the T-TAS regardless of underlying disease, the T-TAS is unable to evaluate the vulnerability of blood vessels, which is one factor that contributes to bleeding [
28‐
31]. Thus, the T-TAS may underestimate the risk of bleeding in diseases associated with vascular abnormalities. Detailed analysis of each underlying disease will be required in the future.
Conclusions
We developed a modified microchip (HD chip)-based flow chamber system suitable for evaluating the thrombogenicity of patients with thrombocytopenia. For analysis of blood samples with normal platelet counts, we still recommend using conventional AR chips.
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