Roles of CD5+, CD19+, CD41a+, CD55+ and CD59+ in Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)

Kaya, Fatma and Berber, Ilhami and Ali Erkurt, Mehmet and Aydogdu, Ismet and Reisli, Ismail (2013) Roles of CD5+, CD19+, CD41a+, CD55+ and CD59+ in Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP). British Journal of Medicine and Medical Research, 4 (2). pp. 660-670. ISSN 22310614

[thumbnail of Kaya422013BJMMR5325.pdf] Text
Kaya422013BJMMR5325.pdf - Published Version

Download (242kB)

Abstract

Methodology: A total of 40 patients (26 women, 14 men, age range: 19-79 years) were studied. The study group included 20 chronic ITP patients (12 women and 8 men, age range: 19-78 years) and the control group included 20 healthy volunteers (14 women and 6 men, age range: 22-79 years). The platelet counts and expressions of CD5+ and CD19+ on lymphocytes, CD5+ on B lymphocytes, CD41a+ on platelets, and CD55+ and CD59+ on erythrocytes were analysed in the patients and control subjects. The chronic ITP patients were evaluated according to their requirements of treatment. Five patients whose platelet counts were above 50,000 mm–3 were observed without treatment. The other 15 patients whose platelet counts were under 50.000 mm–3 and had bleeding, or whose platelet counts were under 20,000 mm–3, were given methylprednisolone treatments (1 mg/kg/day orally). Three of the 15 patients discontinued treatment for various reasons. The twelve patients who continued the methylprednisolone treatment were divided into two subgroups according to their responder status of steroid treatment. The patients whose platelet counts slowly increased above 30,000 mm–3 within three months included the steroid treatment responder subgroups.
The chronic ITP patients were also divided into two subgroups according to the severity of their thrombocytopenia. The limit of the platelet count was 30,000 mm–3 for severe thrombocytopenia. These parameters were analysed according to the response status of the steroid treatment and platelet counts. The platelet counts, and the expressions of these markers, were compared between the subgroups.
Results: The level of CD5+ on B lymphocyte expression (2.19 ± 1.65) in peripheral blood lymphocytes was significantly higher in the immune thrombocytopenic purpura patients than in the controls (P = .05). The CD55+ + CD59+ expression on erythrocytes (98.03 ± 1.77) was significantly higher in the ITP patients than in the controls (P = .05). There was no significant relationship between the expression of CD5+, CD19+ or CD5+on B lymphocytes, CD41a+ expression on platelets or CD55+ and CD59+ expression on erythrocytes, according to the response status to steroid therapy in the patient group (P > 0.05). Additionally, the patients were evaluated according to platelet counts, and there was a significantly positive correlation between the level of CD41a+ expression on the platelets and the platelet count (P = .05).
Conclusion: The level of CD5+ on B lymphocytes was significantly higher in the ITP patients than in the controls. A relationship between CD55+ plus CD59+ expression on erythrocytes and immune destruction of platelets was not observed in the chronic ITP patients.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Asian STM > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 10 Jun 2023 12:49
Last Modified: 17 Jan 2024 04:19
URI: http://journal.send2sub.com/id/eprint/1704

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item