4.2 Article

Platelets in the neonate: Not just a small adult

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/rth2.12719

Keywords

hemostasis; inflammation; neonate; platelet; platelet transfusion

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [K99HL156051, P01 HL046925]

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Neonates, especially preterm infants, have a higher likelihood of decreased platelet counts and bleeding, with the belief that higher platelet transfusions could decrease the risk of bleeding. However, studies have found that neonates who receive more platelet transfusions have a higher incidence of bleeding and mortality. The mechanisms underlying the adverse effects of platelet transfusions in neonates are not clear, but it is hypothesized that transfusing adult platelets into a neonate's different physiological environment may result in developmental mismatch and negative consequences.
Neonates, particularly those born preterm, have a high incidence of thrombocytopenia and bleeding, most commonly in the brain. Because of this, it has historically been accepted that neonates should be transfused at higher platelet counts than older children or adults, to decrease their bleeding risk. However, a number of observational studies and a recent large, randomized trial found a higher incidence of bleeding and mortality in neonates who received more platelet transfusions. The mechanisms underlying the deleterious effects of platelet transfusions in neonates are unknown, but it has been hypothesized that transfusing adult platelets into the very different physiological environment of a neonate may result in a developmental mismatch with potential negative consequences. Specifically, neonatal platelets are hyporeactive in response to multiple agonists and upon activation express less surface P-selectin than adult platelets. However, this hyporeactivity is well balanced by factors in neonatal blood that promote clotting, such as the elevated hematocrit, elevated von Willebrand factor (VWF) levels, and a predominance of ultra-long VWF polymers, with the net result of normal neonatal primary hemostasis. So far, most studies on the developmental differences between neonatal and adult platelets have focused on their hemostatic functions. However, it is now clear that platelets have important nonhemostatic functions, particularly in angiogenesis, immune responses, and inflammation. Whether equally important developmental differences exist with regard to those nonhemostatic platelet functions and how platelet transfusions perturb those processes in neonates remain unanswered questions.

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