Abstract
To determine the duration of storage for cryopreserved platelets, 14 transfusions of random-donor, pooled platelets, stored in the vapor phase of liquid nitrogen for a mean period of 1157 days (range 1060- 1240), were analyzed. Twelve of these transfusions were compared in a paired fashion with fresh, random-donor, pooled platelets given within a few days to the same thrombocytopenic recipients. Platelets had been frozen using 5% dimethylsulfoxide as a cryoprotective agent either at a controlled rate of -1 degrees C/min to -80 degrees C or by simply placing them in the vapor phase (-120 degrees C) of a liquid nitrogen freezer. The mean freeze-thaw loss for the 14 transfusions was 22%, and the mean corrected 1-hr increment in platelet count was 12,600/microliter. In the 12 paired observations, the mean corrected 1- hr increment for frozen platelets was 11,800/microliter and 25,900 for fresh platelets, giving a frozen/fresh recovery of 46%. Random donor platelets can be cryopreserved by these methods for greater than 3 yr with satisfactory post-transfusion increments. This suggests that a reservoir of frozen platelets, either random-donor for emergency transfusion or of known HLA-type for transfusion to alloimmunized patients, can be established and stored for at least 3 yr.
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