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Pretreatment Immature Platelet Fraction as a Surrogate of Reticulated Platelets Predicts the Response to Corticosteroids in Adults with Immune Thrombocytopenia
Author(s) -
Akiyoshi Takami,
Shohei Mizuno,
Ayano Nakamura,
Jo Kanasugi,
Hiroaki Yamamoto,
Lam Vu Quang,
Yuya Nakagami,
Yuta Nakano,
Saki Yamada,
Saori Matsumura,
Souichi Takasugi,
Kaori Uchino,
Tomohiro Horio,
Satona Murakami,
Yuka Oohigashi,
Takayuki Nakayama,
Hiroya Tani,
Megumi Enomoto,
Ichiro Hanamura
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acta haematologica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1421-9662
pISSN - 0001-5792
DOI - 10.1159/000510460
Subject(s) - platelet , medicine , immune thrombocytopenia , gastroenterology , surrogate endpoint , immunology , immune system
Objectives: Reticulated platelets circulating in the blood reflect megakaryopoietic activity and platelet turnover and can be automatically and low-invasively measured as the immature platelet fraction (IPF) using a Sysmex XN hematocytometer. The present study retrospectively investigated whether or not the IPF can predict the treatment response to corticosteroids in adult patients with primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP). Methods: Forty-six patients who had been newly diagnosed with primary treatment-naïve ITP and started treatment with corticosteroids were analyzed. Results: Among the 46 primary ITP patients, 33 (72%) responded to the treatment and 13 (28%) did not. The percentage of IPF (IPF%) among the nonresponders was significantly lower than that of the responders (6.6 vs. 16.0%; p < 0.001). In the receiver operating characteristics analysis, the optimum IPF% cut-off value for predicting the treatment response was 12%, with a specificity of 85% and a sensitivity of 76%. Conclusions: Our findings thus suggest that measuring the IPF% as a surrogate of reticulated platelets is useful to identify patients likely to respond to corticosteroids.

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