2016
DOI: 10.1002/14651858.cd005339.pub2
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Granulocyte transfusions for treating infections in people with neutropenia or neutrophil dysfunction

Abstract: Background Despite modern antimicrobials and supportive therapy bacterial and fungal infections are still major complications in people with prolonged disease-related or treatment-related neutropenia. Transfusions of granulocytes have a long history of usage in clinical practice to support and treat severe infection in high-risk groups of patients with neutropenia or neutrophil dysfunction. However, there is considerable current variability in therapeutic granulocyte transfusion practice, and uncertainty about… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(71 citation statements)
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“…Both classes demonstrate efficacy in reducing the duration of neutropenia, though a less favorable side-effect profile of GM-CSF limits its use primarily to post-HSCT immune reconstitution [135, 136]. While evidence suggests colony-stimulating factors may be safely used to prevent some bacterial pneumonias in cancer populations [137], they are not generally recommended as a treatment of established bacterial infections. Current guidelines recommend administration of G-CSF if the risk of developing febrile neutropenia is greater than 20% based on patient-specific risk factors [136].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Both classes demonstrate efficacy in reducing the duration of neutropenia, though a less favorable side-effect profile of GM-CSF limits its use primarily to post-HSCT immune reconstitution [135, 136]. While evidence suggests colony-stimulating factors may be safely used to prevent some bacterial pneumonias in cancer populations [137], they are not generally recommended as a treatment of established bacterial infections. Current guidelines recommend administration of G-CSF if the risk of developing febrile neutropenia is greater than 20% based on patient-specific risk factors [136].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While this strategy holds promise, it remains investigational and interpretation of the associated studies is challenging due to heterogeneity of the populations and protocols [138]. However, some authors argue that severely ill neutropenic patients may benefit from granulocyte transfusion [137]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Potential efficacy including a dose-dependent effect has been raised by systematic reviews / meta-analyses, but the most recent Cochrane reviews find no overall evidence of a benefit and point to considerable uncertainty [17,18,19,20]. These reviews draw on many randomised studies conducted over a long period aimed at trying to establish effectiveness of granulocyte transfusions.…”
Section: Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As for the review of prophylactic trials, 10 RCTs met the inclusion criteria, for a total of 587 participants. Some studies were conducted over 30 years ago (N = 8) [20]. Unfortunately, 3 studies re-randomised participants, and therefore quantitative analysis could not be performed to include these trials.…”
Section: Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The conclusions were that there is low quality evidence suggesting GTX may work for prophylaxis [1] and that there is not enough evidence to decide on treatment efficacy [2]. These systematic reviews include, for methodological reasons, only 12 and 10 papers, respectively.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%