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Improved Post-Thaw Viability and In Vitro Functionality of Peripheral Blood Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells after Cryopreservation with a Theoretically Optimized Freezing Curve

Authors :
Henri Woelders
Johan W.M. Lagerberg
Marloes R. Tijssen
Carlijn Voermans
Ada de Vries-van Rossen
C. Ellen van der Schoot
Landsteiner Laboratory
Clinical Haematology
Source :
Transfusion, 48(5), 893-901, Transfusion, 48(5), 893-901. Wiley-Blackwell, Transfusion 48 (2008) 5
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2007.

Abstract

Current methods for the cryopreservation of peripheral blood stem cell transplants (PBSCTs) have been developed empirically. Although the use of cryopreserved PBSCTs is successful and usually leads to rapid hematopoietic recovery, the freeze-thawing process is known to induce a significant amount of cell death. Furthermore, the infusion of DMSO, which is used to protect the cells against damage induced by freezing, can cause morbidity. Freezing methods may be improved by using a fundamental cryobiological approach, addressing the putative causes of cell injury during freezing and thawing. Different cell types may have different optimal cooling rates. Cooling rates above this optimum may cause ‘fast cooling damage’, e.g. by lethal intracellular ice formation, while cooling rates below the optimum may lead to ‘slow cooling damage’, These cryoinjuries relate to the osmotic changes during freezing and thawing, and the resulting fluxes of water and cryoprotectant across the cell membrane. Mathematic modeling of these osmotic events can be used to predict the optimal cooling rates for specific cell types. Woelders and Chaveiro* have developed a model that calculates the ‘compromise’ cooling rate for every subzero temperature, resulting in non-linear freezing curves. In the present study, this model was applied to predict ‘optimal’ freezing curves for PBSCTs with 10% and 5% DMSO, respectively, using values for the membrane permeability coefficients and related parameters as published earlier for cord blood HPCs. These predicted curves were tested empirically and compared to the presently used standard linear freezing curve. CD34+ selected and unselected PBSCs were cryopreserved using the standard or the new freezing curves. Post-thaw quality was evaluated by cell viability, CFU-GM formation and megakaryocyte outgrowth. With 10% DMSO, the use of the predicted optimal freezing curve compared to the currently used freezing curve resulted in increased post-thaw viability of CD34+ cells (mean±SEM; 78.4%±6.6% versus 72.0%±6.1% for unselected CD34+ cells and 92.0%±0.6% versus 83.9%±2.5% [p

Details

ISSN :
15280020, 00064971, and 00411132
Volume :
110
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f735c860b9dc40b4976544dc030d8627
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v110.11.1222.1222