Murray N A
Imperial College, Faculty of Medicine, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK.
Acta Paediatr Suppl. 2002;91(438):74-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2002.tb02908.x.
Phlebotomy-induced anaemia excepted, thrombocytopenia is the most common haematological abnormality in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) patients. Roughly one-quarter of all NICU patients and half of all sick preterm neonates develop thrombocytopenia. Whereas a large number of varied precipitating conditions has been identified, early-onset thrombocytopenia (<72 h) is most commonly associated with fetomaternal conditions complicated by placental insufficiency and/or fetal hypoxia, e.g. maternal pre-eclampsia and fetal intrauterine growth restriction. The resulting neonatal thrombocytopenia is usually mild to moderate, resolves spontaneously and requires no specific therapy. Deviation from this pattern of thrombocytopenia suggests the presence of more significant precipitating conditions. The most important of these are the immune thrombocytopenias, and every NICU should develop investigation and treatment protocols to manage these cases promptly and avoid unnecessary risk of haemorrhage. In contrast, late-onset thrombocytopenia (>72 h) is almost always associated with sepsis or necrotizing enterocolitis and the associated thrombocytopenia is severe, prolonged and often requires treatment by platelet transfusion. Unfortunately, evidence-based guidelines for platelet transfusion therapy in NICU patients are currently unavailable, making it difficult to define widely accepted thresholds for transfusion and leading to a significant variation in transfusion practice between centres.
While improving this situation remains a pressing need, the growing evidence that impaired megakaryocytopoiesis and platelet production are major contributors to many neonatal thrombocytopenias suggests that recombinant haemopoietic growth factors, including thrombopoietin and interleukin-11, may be useful future therapies to ameliorate neonatal thrombocytopenia.
除静脉穿刺引起的贫血外,血小板减少是新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)患者中最常见的血液学异常。所有NICU患者中约四分之一以及所有患病早产儿中有一半会出现血小板减少。虽然已确定了大量不同的诱发因素,但早发型血小板减少(<72小时)最常与伴有胎盘功能不全和/或胎儿缺氧的母胎状况相关,例如母亲子痫前期和胎儿宫内生长受限。由此导致的新生儿血小板减少通常为轻度至中度,可自发缓解,无需特殊治疗。偏离这种血小板减少模式提示存在更严重的诱发因素。其中最重要的是免疫性血小板减少症,每个NICU都应制定调查和治疗方案,以便及时处理这些病例并避免不必要的出血风险。相比之下,晚发型血小板减少(>72小时)几乎总是与败血症或坏死性小肠结肠炎相关,且相关的血小板减少严重、持续时间长,常需输注血小板进行治疗。不幸的是,目前尚无针对NICU患者血小板输注治疗的循证指南,这使得难以确定广泛接受的输血阈值,并导致各中心之间的输血实践存在显著差异。
虽然迫切需要改善这种情况,但越来越多的证据表明巨核细胞生成和血小板产生受损是许多新生儿血小板减少的主要原因,这表明包括血小板生成素和白细胞介素-11在内的重组造血生长因子可能是未来改善新生儿血小板减少的有用疗法。