BACKGROUND: Neutropenic patients often develop bacterial or fungal infections not responding to broad-spectrum antibacterial or antifungal agents. Clinical efforts were made with transfusion of granulocyte concentrates; however, functions of granulocytes after multiple G-CSF stimulations and after apheresis are not yet investigated and described sufficiently. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: The aim of this study was to characterize functional and immunologic variables of granulocytes in blood samples drawn from donors before and after each stimulation episode with G-CSF, in the resulting granulocyte concentrates and in the patients 8 hours after transfusion. RESULTS: Chemotaxis was not influenced, neither by G-CSF application nor by apheresis. Multiple G-CSF stimulations enhanced oxidative burst and phagocytosis of Escherichia coli in donor granulocytes. These values returned to basal levels in granulocyte concentrates. Expression of granulocytic surface antigens was down-regulated after application of G-CSF but returned to normal and in part enhanced values in concentrates. A clinically relevant increase of proinflammatory cytokines could not be detected. Leukotriene B-4 production was reduced after the fourth G-CSF stimulation in the donor blood and enhanced in the granulocyte concentrate after apheresis. Results in recipients indicate that changes of granulocyte function noted in concentrates were only transient. CONCLUSION: Stimulation of healthy donors with repeated G-CSF injections and subsequent granulocyte apheresis does not dramatically change decisive functions of granulocytes.