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Home / Harm to a Donor / Drug related reactions / GCSF-related / Splenic rupture

Splenic rupture

Record number: 
883
Adverse Occurrence type: 
GCSF-related
MPHO Type: 
Apheresis
Estimated frequency: 
Rare
Alerting signals, symptoms, evidence of occurrence: 
Abdominal pain, hypotension, shock on days of injections
Demonstration of imputability or root cause: 
Definite/probable. Temporal relationship to GCSF.
Keywords: 
G-CSF (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor)
injections
toxicity
abdominal pain
hypotension
shock
PBSC (peripheral blood stem cells)
apheresis
donor reaction
allogeneic
References: 
World Marrow Donor Association. SEAR Registry, 12th ed.
Splenic rupture after granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor mobilization in a peripheral blood progenitor cell donor
Spontaneous splenic rupture following administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF): occurrence in an allogeneic donor of peripheral blood stem cells
Splenic rupture in a parental donor undergoing peripheral blood progenitor cell mobilization
Spontaneous splenic rupture in a healthy allogeneic donor of peripheral-blood stem cell following the administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (g-csf). A case report and review of the literature
Spontaneous rupture of spleen during peripheral blood stem-cell mobilisation in a healthy donor
Stem cell mobilisation with 16 microg/kg vs 10 microg/kg of G-CSF for allogeneic transplantation in healthy donors
Critical overview of the current status of organ donors with primary central nervous system tumors
Suggest references: 
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The cases, bibliography and associated comments included in this website and database have been provided by experts worldwide and reviewed by voluntary editorial working groups. The data and information is not guaranteed to be complete or to be fully up to date at any particular moment and it reflects the knowledge and views of the experts participating, not those of the World Health Organisation or the Italian National Transplant Centre.