Safety of Therapeutic Apheresis in Children and Adolescents
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Safety of Therapeutic Apheresis in Children and Adolescents. / Taylan, Christina; Schaaf, Anne; Dorn, Corina; Schmitt, Claus Peter; Loos, Sebastian; Kanzelmeyer, Nele; Pape, Lars; Müller, Dominik; Weber, Lutz T; Thumfart, Julia.
in: FRONT PEDIATR, Jahrgang 10, 850819, 2022.Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/Zeitung › SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz › Forschung › Begutachtung
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Safety of Therapeutic Apheresis in Children and Adolescents
AU - Taylan, Christina
AU - Schaaf, Anne
AU - Dorn, Corina
AU - Schmitt, Claus Peter
AU - Loos, Sebastian
AU - Kanzelmeyer, Nele
AU - Pape, Lars
AU - Müller, Dominik
AU - Weber, Lutz T
AU - Thumfart, Julia
N1 - Copyright © 2022 Taylan, Schaaf, Dorn, Schmitt, Loos, Kanzelmeyer, Pape, Müller, Weber and Thumfart.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Background: Therapeutic apheresis (TA) is based on the principles of either removing dissolved pathogenic substances (e.g., antibodies) from the blood plasma or replacing plasma factors. It expands the therapeutic scope for a variety of diseases. Safety analysis in the pediatric field are scant. The aim of this analysis was to analyze specific complications of TA modalities - plasma exchange (PE) and immunoadsorption (IA) - in children and adolescents.Methods: Children and adolescents (n = 298) who had received TA from 2008 to 2018 in five pediatric nephrology centers were analyzed retrospectively. In total, 4.004 treatments (2.287 PE and 1.717 IA) were evaluated.Results: Indications for TA were mainly nephrological and neurological diseases. The three main indications were antibody-mediated graft rejection (13.4%), hemolytic uremic syndrome mainly with neurological involvement (12.8%), and AB0-incompatible transplantation (11.7%). Complications developed in 440 of the 4004 sessions (11%), of which one third were non-specific (nausea, headache). IA was better tolerated than PE. Complications were reported in 9.5% (n = 163) of the IA versus 12.1% (277) of the PE sessions (p < 0.001). When considering different types of complications, significantly more non-specific/non-allergic events (p = 0.02) and allergic reactions occurred in PE sessions (p < 0.001). More complications occurred with PE, when using fresh frozen plasma (16.2%; n = 145) in comparison to human albumin (14.5%; n = 115) (p < 0.001).Conclusions: Therapeutic apheresis in childhood and adolescence is a safe treatment procedure. IA showed a lower complication rate than PE. Therefore, IA may be preferably provided if the underlying disease pathomechanisms do not require PE.
AB - Background: Therapeutic apheresis (TA) is based on the principles of either removing dissolved pathogenic substances (e.g., antibodies) from the blood plasma or replacing plasma factors. It expands the therapeutic scope for a variety of diseases. Safety analysis in the pediatric field are scant. The aim of this analysis was to analyze specific complications of TA modalities - plasma exchange (PE) and immunoadsorption (IA) - in children and adolescents.Methods: Children and adolescents (n = 298) who had received TA from 2008 to 2018 in five pediatric nephrology centers were analyzed retrospectively. In total, 4.004 treatments (2.287 PE and 1.717 IA) were evaluated.Results: Indications for TA were mainly nephrological and neurological diseases. The three main indications were antibody-mediated graft rejection (13.4%), hemolytic uremic syndrome mainly with neurological involvement (12.8%), and AB0-incompatible transplantation (11.7%). Complications developed in 440 of the 4004 sessions (11%), of which one third were non-specific (nausea, headache). IA was better tolerated than PE. Complications were reported in 9.5% (n = 163) of the IA versus 12.1% (277) of the PE sessions (p < 0.001). When considering different types of complications, significantly more non-specific/non-allergic events (p = 0.02) and allergic reactions occurred in PE sessions (p < 0.001). More complications occurred with PE, when using fresh frozen plasma (16.2%; n = 145) in comparison to human albumin (14.5%; n = 115) (p < 0.001).Conclusions: Therapeutic apheresis in childhood and adolescence is a safe treatment procedure. IA showed a lower complication rate than PE. Therefore, IA may be preferably provided if the underlying disease pathomechanisms do not require PE.
U2 - 10.3389/fped.2022.850819
DO - 10.3389/fped.2022.850819
M3 - SCORING: Journal article
C2 - 35498796
VL - 10
JO - FRONT PEDIATR
JF - FRONT PEDIATR
SN - 2296-2360
M1 - 850819
ER -