Abstract
Over 170 000 cord blood units are stored worldwide. For the majority of patients in need of an allogeneic donor, a cord blood unit can be found which is identical or has less than 2 HLA mismatches. However, when partially mismatches cord blood units are used for transplantation, the number of CD34+ cells per kg body weight becomes important and should be higher than 1.7 105/kg (
To optimize CD34+ cell content in the stored units, we compared our present selection method based on TNC and volume (criterium 40/10/?) with a selection method based on volume, TNC and CD34 content. 131 samples with volumes above 40mL and TNC above 8x108 were analysed for CD34+ cell content before processing and subsequently processed in routine. Using this data set, we compared criterium 40/10/? with criteria 40/8/2 (volume:40mL, TNC:8x108, CD34 2x106). We found that both criteria resulted in an equal number of units acceptable for storage. CD34+ cell content increased from 4.5x106 for criterium 40/10/? to 4.8x106 for criterium 40/8/2 whereas TNC dropped from 14.6x109 to 14.1x109. 100%, 47%, 9% and 4 % (criterium 40/8/2) vs 88%, 43%, 9% and 4%(criteria 40/10/?) of cord blood is acceptable for patients weighing 10, 25, 50 and 75 kg resp., demonstrating that the 12% essentially unusable cord blood units are replaced by units which can be used for small children. In conclusion: by including CD34+ cell content in the selection criteria, CD34+ cell content increases so that 100% of the cord blood units can be used for children up to 10 kg. This measure however requires that CD34 measurement is performed on all units with TNC above 8x108 cells.
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