Haematopoietic Growth Factors & Agents
Erythropoiesis-stimulating, myeloid & thrombopoietic growth factors in clinical pharmacology
Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + MUHS + VNSGU · 11
RGUHSSep '25
RGUHSSep '25
RGUHSDec '23
RGUHSJul '23
DNBJun '20
VNSGUMar '19
MPMSU2014
MUHSSummer '14
RGUHSOct '10
RGUHSOct '09
RGUHSApr '07
Introduction
- Haematopoietic growth factors are glycoprotein hormones, active at very low concentrations, that regulate the proliferation, differentiation and survival of blood-cell progenitors from a small pool of self-renewing pluripotent haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) — normal adult output exceeds 200–400 billion cells/day.
- Demand-responsive — production is regulated by need — red-cell output can rise >20-fold in anaemia/hypoxaemia, leukocyte output rises with infection, and platelet output rises 10- to 20-fold in thrombocytopenia.
- Three therapeutic groups — erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) for anaemia, myeloid growth factors (G-CSF, GM-CSF) for neutropenia, and thrombopoietic agents for thrombocytopenia — each paralleling the deficient lineage.
- Clinical relevance — they reduce transfusion dependence in CKD, cancer chemotherapy and marrow failure, enable peripheral-blood stem-cell transplantation, and treat refractory immune thrombocytopenia.
Continue reading
Haematopoietic Growth Factors
PharmaNotes Pro · LAQ
Sign in with your Google account. If you're already subscribed, the chapter unlocks immediately — otherwise, pick Monthly or Annual on the next step.