The clinical and biological impact of new pathogen inactivation technologies on platelet concentrates.


Autoria(s): Kaiser-Guignard, J.; Canellini, G.; Lion, N.; Abonnenc, M.; Osselaer, J.C.; Tissot, J.D.
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Since 1990, several techniques have been developed to photochemically inactivate pathogens in platelet concentrates, potentially leading to safer transfusion therapy. The three most common methods are amotosalen/UVA (INTERCEPT Blood System), riboflavin/UVA-UVB (MIRASOL PRT), and UVC (Theraflex-UV). We review the biology of pathogen inactivation methods, present their efficacy in reducing pathogens, discuss their impact on the functional aspects of treated platelets, and review clinical studies showing the clinical efficiency of the pathogen inactivation methods and their possible toxicity.

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info:pmid:25192602

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Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

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Fonte

Blood Reviews286235-241

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article

Formato

application/pdf