Login / Signup

Transient increase in platelet counts associated with COVID-19 infection during TPO-RA as the second-line treatment in children with ITP.

Zhifa WangXiaoling ChengNan WangJinxi MengJingyao MaZhenping ChenRunhui Wu
Published in: British journal of haematology (2023)
The thrombopoietin receptor agonists (TPO-RA) were recommended for primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) during the pandemic of COVID-19. However, the incidence of thrombocytosis and thrombosis was sporadically reported in the chronic immune thrombocytopenia (CITP) patients receiving TPO-RA during the COVID-19 infection. With the local prevalence of COVID-19 in December 2022 in the Beijing area, we got more powerful evidence about the change in platelet (Plt) counts associated with COVID-19 infection. A single-centre observational cohort study was performed from the beginning of December 2022 to the end of February 2023 to enrol CITP children treated with TPO-RA alone as the second-line treatment and suffering from the COVID-19 infection in December 2022. The Plt counts before, during and after COVID-19 infection were collected. In total, 67 (34 males and 33 females) patients with 8.10 (2.15, 15.70) years of age were enrolled. Sixty-three patients who had responded to the TPO-RA showed a transient increase in Plt counts after the infection of COVID-19. The time of starting to increase was on Day 3 (2, 7), and to the peak level on Day 14 (7, 19) of infection with the peak Plt count was 289 (88, 1974) × 10 9 /L. With at least 2 months observation period from COVID-19 infection, the Plt counts of 100% (63/63) patients declined to the baseline on Day 25 (14, 41). The phenomenon of transient increase in Plt counts has been shown in the CITP children who responded to TPO-RA when suffering from COVID-19 infection.
Keyphrases