American journal of hematology
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Fresh frozen plasma has no beneficial effect on the hemostatic system in children receiving L-asparaginase.
L-Asparaginase (ASP), a chemotherapeutic agent used in the treatment of children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), is linked to thromboembolic complications secondary to an acquired deficiency of antithrombin III (ATIII). Fresh frozen plasma (FFP) is used to prevent and/or treat thrombotic complications in these children. However, the effect of FFP on plasma concentrations of ATIII and biochemical markers of activation of coagulation has never been tested. ⋯ Pre-infusion plasma concentrations of markers of endogenous thrombin generation (thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT)) and activation of the fibrinolytic system in response to activation of the coagulation system (D-dimer levels) were significantly increased. However, FFP had no statistical or clinically important effect on concentrations of these markers. We conclude that FFP administration for the prevention and treatment of acquired ATIII deficiency secondary to ASP has no demonstrable benefit on plasma levels of coagulation proteins and is unlikely to be of clinical benefit.