CD34+ cell content of 126 341 cord blood units in the US inventory: implications for transplantation and banking. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • CD34+ cell dose is critical for cord blood (CB) engraftment. However, the CD34+ content of the CB inventory in the United States is unknown. We examined the CD34+ cell content of 126 341 red blood cell-depleted US units banked from January 2007 to September 2017 with a total nucleated cell (TNC) count of ≥90 × 107 and a cryovolume of 24-55 mL. Median pre-cryopreservation TNC content was 127 × 107 (interquartile range [IQR], 108-156 × 107); CD34+ cell content was 44 × 105 (IQR, 29 to 67 × 105). The median CD34+:TNC ratio was 0.34%. TNC and CD34+ cell content correlation was weak (r = 0.24). Of 7125 units with TNCs of ≥210 × 107, only 47% had CD34+ content of ≥100 × 105 However, some units had high CD34+ content for a given TNC count. Only 4% of CB units were acceptable as single-unit grafts (TNCs, ≥2.5 × 107/kg; CD34+ cells, ≥1.5 × 105/kg) for 70-kg patients; 22% of units were adequate for 70-kg patients using lower dose criteria (TNCs, ≥1.5 × 107/kg; CD34+ cells, ≥1.0 × 105/kg) suitable for a double-unit graft. These findings highlight that units with the highest TNC dose may not have the highest CD34+ dose, units with unexpectedly high CD34+ content (a ratio of >1.0%) should be verified, and the US CB inventory of adequately sized single units for larger patients is small. They also support the ongoing use of double-unit grafts, a focus on banking high-dose units, and development of expansion technologies.

authors

  • Barker, Juliet
  • Kempenich, Jane
  • Kurtzberg, Joanne
  • Brunstein, Claudio G
  • Delaney, Colleen
  • Milano, Filippo
  • Politikos, Ioannis
  • Shpall, Elizabeth J
  • Scaradavou, Andromachi
  • Dehn, Jason

publication date

  • April 23, 2019

Research

keywords

  • Blood Banks
  • Blood Safety
  • Cord Blood Stem Cell Transplantation
  • Fetal Blood
  • Medical Audit

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6482363

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85068626626

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1182/bloodadvances.2018029157

PubMed ID

  • 30995984

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 3

issue

  • 8