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result(s) for
"Christensen, Robert D"
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A “Gold Standard” Test for Diagnosing and Quantifying Hemolysis in Neonates and Infants
by
Christensen, Robert D
,
Stevenson, David K
,
Vreman, Hendrik J
in
Anemia
,
Diagnostic systems
,
Erythrocytes
2023
Identifying “gold standard” diagnostic tests can promote evidence-based neonatology practice. Hemolysis is a pathological shortening of the erythrocyte lifespan, differing from erythrocyte senescence in responsible mechanisms and clinical implications. Diagnosing hemolysis goes beyond a binary (yes vs. no) determination. It is characterized according to magnitude, and as acute vs. chronic, and genetically based vs. not. For neonates with significant hyperbilirubinemia or anemia, detecting hemolysis and quantifying its magnitude provides diagnostic clarity. The 2022 American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Clinical Practice Guideline on management of hyperbilirubinemia in the newborn states that hemolysis is a risk factor for developing significant hyperbilirubinemia and neurotoxicity. The guideline recommends identifying hemolysis from any cause, but specific guidance is not provided. A spectrum of laboratory tests has been endorsed as diagnostic methods for hemolysis. Herein we examine these laboratory tests and recommend one as the “gold standard” for diagnosing and quantifying hemolysis in neonates and infants.
Journal Article
HIF-mediated increased ROS from reduced mitophagy and decreased catalase causes neocytolysis
by
Song, Jihyun
,
Christensen, Robert D.
,
Prchal, Josef T.
in
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2015
During prolonged hypoxia, hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) mediate an increase in erythropoiesis, leading to an increased red blood cell (RBC) mass and polycythemia. Upon return to normoxia, the increased RBC mass is abruptly overcorrected by the preferential destruction of hypoxia-formed young RBCs, a phenomenon termed neocytolysis. The molecular and biochemical mechanisms involved in neocytolysis are unknown. We developed a murine model of neocytolysis by exposing mice to 12 % oxygen for 10 days followed by return to normoxia. Upon return to normoxia, there was excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in RBCs from an increased reticulocyte mitochondrial mass correlating with decreased
Bnip3L
transcripts (Bnip3L mediates reticulocyte mitophagy) and reduced catalase activity. During hypoxia, upregulated miR-21 resulted in low catalase activity in young RBCs. Furthermore, neocytolysis was attenuated by antioxidants and plasma catalase and blunted in mice that had constitutively high expression of HIFs. Among human neonates studied, we report data supporting the existence of neocytolysis during the first week of life. Together, these experiments indicate that the major mechanisms causing neocytolysis involve (1) production of young RBCs with low catalase during hypoxia and (2) lysis of the young RBCs after return to normoxia, mediated by ROS from an increased mitochondrial mass.
Key messages
We report a mouse model of neocytolysis.
Neocytolysis is caused by excessive ROS formation mediated by HIF.
ROS is generated from increased mitochondria in reticulocytes.
Hypoxia-generated RBCs have low catalase and are preferentially destroyed.
Reduced catalase is regulated by increased microRNA-21.
Journal Article
Urinary ferritin; a potential noninvasive way to screen NICU patients for iron deficiency
by
Elmont, Jennifer O
,
Gerday Erick
,
Middleton, Bruce A
in
Correlation coefficient
,
Correlation coefficients
,
Creatinine
2021
ObjectiveBuilding on our previous study, showing a correlation between ferritin in serum and urine, we conducted a feasibility evaluation, measuring urinary ferritin as a potential noninvasive screening test for iron deficiency among NICU patients.Study designThis was a prospective analysis of paired serum/urine ferritin levels. We defined iron-limited erythropoiesis by a RET-He <5th percentile lower reference interval (<28 pg).ResultsWe obtained 49 paired serum/urine samples from neonates judged as at-risk for iron deficiency. Urine ferritin (“corrected” for urine creatinine and specific gravity) correlated with serum ferritin (correlation coefficient of log10-transformed values 0.44). A corrected urine ferritin <12 ng/mL had a sensitivity of 82% (95% CI, 67–93%) and a specificity of 100% (CI, 66–100%) for detecting iron-limited erythropoiesis, with a positive predictive value of 100% (CI, 89–100%).ConclusionsMeasuring urinary ferritin in NICU patients is feasible. Since low values identify iron-limitation, this could become a useful noninvasive screen.
Journal Article
Hyperferritinemia among very-low-birthweight infants in Thailand: a prospective cohort study
by
Christensen, Robert D.
,
Tantanate, Chaicharoen
,
Ngerncham, Sopapan
in
692/499
,
692/699/1541
,
Birth weight
2024
Objectives
To determine the incidence of hyperferritinemia in VLBW infants, and its association with neonatal morbidity.
Study design
Prospective cohort study in a tertiary-level hospital in Bangkok, from March 2022 to January 2023. Serum ferritin (SF) was measured in VLBW infants at one month and repeated monthly for those with hyperferritinemia (SF > 300 ng/mL).
Results
Gestational age and birth weight were 29.7 ± 2.4 weeks (mean ± SD) and 1100 g (IQR, 830, 1340). Hyperferritinemia was identified in 30.1% (95% CI, 20.8–41.4). After adjustment, only packed red cell transfusion >15 mL/kg was associated with hyperferritinemia (RR 3.1; 95% CI, 1.5–6.4). All elevated SF levels returned to normal within four months. Hyperferritinemia was associated with severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia (RR 2.3, 95% CI, 1.0–5.4) and retinopathy of prematurity (RR 3.5, 95% CI, 1.4–8.6).
Conclusion
Hyperferritinemia is common among our VLBW infants, particularly after transfusion, and is associated with severe BPD and ROP.
Journal Article
Alloimmune hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn: genetics, structure, and function of the commonly involved erythrocyte antigens
by
Christensen, Robert D
,
Dizon-Townson, Donna S
,
Bahr, Timothy M
in
Antibodies
,
Antigens
,
Autoantigens
2023
Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN) can occur when a pregnant woman has antibody directed against an erythrocyte surface antigen expressed by her fetus. This alloimmune disorder is restricted to situations where transplacental transfer of maternal antibody to the fetus occurs, and binds to fetal erythrocytes, and significantly shortens the red cell lifespan. The pathogenesis of HDFN involves maternal sensitization to erythrocyte “non-self” antigens (those she does not express). Exposure of a woman to a non-self-erythrocyte antigen principally occurs through either a blood transfusion or a pregnancy where paternally derived erythrocyte antigens, expressed by her fetus, enter her circulation, and are immunologically recognized as foreign. This review focuses on the genetics, structure, and function of the erythrocyte antigens that are most frequently involved in the pathogenesis of alloimmune HDFN. By providing this information we aim to convey useful insights to clinicians caring for patients with this condition.
Journal Article
Infantile Pyknocytosis: End-Tidal CO, %Micro-R Measurements, Next-Generation Sequencing, and Transfusion Avoidance with Darbepoetin
2020
Infantile pyknocytosis is a rare, self-limited, hemolytic condition of unknown pathogenesis. It is diagnosed when a neonate with Coombs-negative hemolytic anemia has abundant pyknocytes and a characteristic clinical course after other hemolytic disorders has been excluded. Previous reports suggest that transfusions might be avoidable in this condition by administering recombinant erythropoietin. We cared for a patient with this disorder where we employed novel diagnostics and therapeutics. Despite these, and a good outcome free of transfusions, we continue to consider the condition to be idiopathic.
Journal Article
Banked term umbilical cord blood to meet the packed red blood cell transfusion needs of extremely-low-gestational-age neonates: a feasibility analysis
2024
Objectives
To assess the feasibility of drawing, processing, safety-testing, and banking term umbilical cord blood to meet the packed red blood cell transfusion (RBC Tx) needs of extremely-low-gestational-age neonates (ELGANs).
Design
(1) Retrospectively analyze all ELGANs RBC Tx over the past three years, (2) Estimate local cord blood availability, (3) Assess interest in this project, and implementation barriers, through stakeholder surveys.
Results
In three years we cared for 266 ELGANs; 165 (62%) received ≥1 RBC Tx. Annual RBC Tx averaged 197 (95% CI, 152–243). If 10% of our 10,353 annual term births had cord blood drawn and processed, and half of those tested were acceptable for Tx, collections would exceed the 95th % upper estimate for need by >four-fold. Interest exceeded 97%. Identified barriers included FDA approval, training to collect cord blood, and cost.
Conclusion
RBC Tx needs of ELGANS could be met by local cord blood collection.
Journal Article
Implementing evidence-based restrictive neonatal intensive care unit platelet transfusion guidelines
by
Bahr, Timothy M.
,
Davenport, Patricia
,
Christensen, Robert D.
in
692/308
,
692/308/409
,
Blood platelets
2024
Platelet transfusions are life-saving treatments for specific populations of neonates. However, recent evidence indicates that liberal prophylactic platelet transfusion practices cause harm to premature neonates. New efforts to better balance benefits and risks are leading to the adoption of more restrictive platelet transfusion guidelines in neonatal intensive care units (NICU). Although restrictive guidelines have the potential to improve outcomes, implementation barriers exist. We postulate that as neonatologists become more familiar with the data on the harm of liberal platelet transfusions, enthusiasm for restrictive guidelines will increase and barriers to implementation will decrease. Thus, we focused this educational review on; (1) the adverse effects of platelet transfusions to neonates, (2) awareness of platelet transfusion “refractoriness” in thrombocytopenic neonates and its association with poor outcomes, and (3) the impetus to find alternatives to transfusing platelets from adult donors to NICU patients.
Journal Article