EFFECTS OF TRANSFUSION IN ANEMIA OF PREMATURITY
KB Schwarz, PR Dear, AB Gill, SJ Newell, and M Richards
Pediatr Hematol Oncol,October 1, 2005; 22(7):
551-9.
The authors aimed to test the hypothesis that blood
transfusions depress hematopoiesis in healthy infants with anemia of prematurity
(AOP). They also set out to find markers that predict recovery from AOP.
Thirty-nine premature babies underwent weekly and post-transfusion measurements
of hemoglobin concentrations, reticulocyte counts (RCC), and erythropoietin
levels (EPO). RCC and EPO dropped significantly 7 days after a blood transfusion
but had normalized after 14 days. Elevated RCC or EPO levels were not predictive
of an increase in hemoglobin. Postnatal HbFg/dL was higher in babies who had
received transfusions. The authors conclude that blood transfusions depress
erythropoiesis in infants with AOP and stimulate HbF synthesis but this effect
is not sustained. Reticulocyte counts and erythropoietin levels are unhelpful in
predicting recovery from AOP.
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