Abstract

Megakaryocyte growth-promoting activity (MK-GPA) was scored on a scale of 0-3 in the serum of 23 patients up to 120 d following bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for leukaemia. Nine of 19 allografts and two of four autografts had thrombocytopenia requiring platelet transfusion more than 30 d after BMT. There was a close correlation between MK-GPA and platelet count. MK-GPA reached a maximum before day 30 after BMT but remained elevated in patients with persisting thrombocytopenia secondary to poor engraftment, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) or relapse. Recent platelet transfusion did not suppress serum MK-GPA. Two of four patients undergoing autologous BMT for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) showed delayed platelet recovery and persistence of MK-GPA in the serum. Seven further AML remission marrows were tested for megakaryocyte production before or after autologous BMT, using pooled sera with known MK-GPA activity. Megakaryocyte generation was reduced before BMT and absent in post transplant samples. This failure of MK production was not corrected by T-cell depletion or by the presence of adherent cells from normal marrow. We conclude that thrombocytopenia after BMT is associated with an appropriate increase in MK-GPA levels in response to a reduction in the megakaryocyte pool rather than the platelet pool, and that persisting thrombocytopenia after autologous BMT is due to decreased numbers of available megakaryocyte precursors.

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