A new discovery from the University of Virginia School of Medicine could allow doctors to ramp up production of blood-clotting platelets on demand, a timely finding following the Red Cross’ declaration earlier this year of a national blood “crisis.” The group labeled it the worst blood and platelet shortage in more than a decade and said it posed a “concerning risk to patient care.”
In addition to making available more lifesaving platelets for transfusion, 鶹ƽ new discovery could help doctors better treat thrombocytopenia, a potentially dangerous clotting disorder that strikes almost a third of newborns in intensive care. The finding also could benefit patients battling cancer who need cord-blood transplants.
“Because of worsening shortages of donor-derived platelet units, there has been a big push within both public and private sectors for cell culture-based methods of generating platelets,” Dr. Adam N. Goldfarb, chief of 鶹ƽ Division of Experimental Pathology, said. “In addition to alleviating platelet shortages, the cell culture approach affords the opportunity for creating ‘designer platelets’ – for example, platelets that do not elicit an immune response, which is a major problem in cancer patients.”