Transfusion support during childbirth for a woman with anti-U and the RHD*weak D type 4.0 allele
Categoria dell'articolo: article
Pubblicato online: 31 mar 2021
Pagine: 1 - 4
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/immunohematology-2021-001
Parole chiave
© 2021 Q. Yin et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn is reliably prevented by proper management, based on antenatal D typing and screening for red blood cell (RBC) antibodies. Many hospital laboratories do not determine the
We report a pregnant woman with anti-U and a serologic weak D phenotype. The clinical workup in this case illustrated the importance of molecular analysis of serologic weak D phenotypes early in the pregnancy to preserve rare D– RBC units and to eliminate the unnecessary administration of RhIG.
A 23-year-old African American woman (gravida 2, para 1) presented for childbirth. The woman had no history of blood transfusion. Testing of her blood sample showed her RBCs to be group B with a serologic weak D phenotype; anti-U was identified by the antibody screening process (Table 1). Without any molecular information for her
Clinical laboratory results for mother and neonate
Test | Results (normal range) |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
ABO group | B |
RhD phenotype | Serologic weak D phenotype: 2 + reaction strength‡ |
RhCE phenotype | C–E–c+e+ |
Antibody screen | Anti-U |
DAT | Negative |
Red cell genotyping† | |
|
|
|
Hemizygous |
|
|
Hemoglobin, g/dL | |
Antepartum | 9.8 (10.0–15.0) |
Postpartum | 8.9 (10.0–15.0) |
|
|
|
|
ABO group | B |
RhD phenotype | D+ |
RhCE phenotype | C–E–c+e+ |
DAT | Negative |
Red cell genotyping§ | |
|
|
|
Compound heterozygous |
|
|
Hemoglobin, g/dL | 17.6 (14.0–24.0) |
Unconjugated bilirubin, mg/dL | |
At birth | 4.9 (<6) |
4 hours after birth | 5.5 (<6) |
Reticulocyte count, % | 4.46 (3.0–7.0) |
At the end of the third trimester.
Tested by the conventional tube method at immediate spin (Anti-D Blend, oligoclonal antibody mixture with clone numbers BS232, BS221, and H41 11B7; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA).
At birth.
DAT = direct antiglobulin test.
In the week before delivery, nucleotide sequencing of the
Single nucleotide variants detected in the
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Location | Nucleotide change* | dbSNP reference number | Protein residue change† | Mother‡ | Neonate |
Promoter | −368a>g | rs28710826 | NA | g/g | a/g |
Intron 2 | 336−76_−75−>insTGAA | rs112473736 | NA | insTGAA/insTGAA | insTGAA/− |
Intron 3 | 487−414a>g | rs28586271 | NA | g/g | a/g |
487−316t>g | rs28572396 | NA | g/g | t/g | |
Exon 4 | 602C>G | rs1053355 | Thr201Arg | G/G | C/G |
Exon 5 | 667T>G | rs1053356 | Phe223Val | G/G | T/G |
Intron 5 | 801+219 t> g | rs28510210 | NA | g/g | g/g |
801+395g>a | rs145236797 | NA | a/a | g/a | |
802−16c>t | rs201120463 | NA | t/t | c/t | |
Exon 6 | 819G>A | rs150606530 | Ala273Ala | A/A | G/A |
Intron 6 | 939+295c>a | rs112222730 | NA | c/c | c/a |
Intron 7 | 1073+94g>a | rs533903485 | NA | a/a | g/a |
1073 + 311g> c | rs3118453 | NA | c/c | c/c |
Nucleotide substitutions are shown relative to the reference sequence (NG_007494.1). Nucleotide positions are defined using the first nucleotide of the coding sequence of NM_016124.4 isoform as nucleotide position 1. The uppercase nucleotides are located in the coding sequence, and the lowercase nucleotides are located in the non-coding sequence of the
Relative to the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Reference Sequence NP_057208.2.
The nucleotide sequence of the
dbSNP = Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Database; NA = not applicable.
Zygosity testing for the
We still applied an RFLP assay that is designed to detect the standard downstream
The mother, with an unexplained hemoglobin (Hb) concentration of 9.8 g/dL prepartum, had an uneventful vaginal delivery. Her Hb dropped by 0.9 g/dL, and she did not require transfusion (Table 1). The neonate’s blood sample typed as group B, D+ with normal clinical laboratory results (Table 1), and no treatment was required. The 2 U–, D+ RBC units were returned and used in the care of another pregnant woman with anti-U. The unnecessarily procured U–, D– RBC unit had to be frozen, however, with only 14 days of shelf-life remaining.
The present clinical report exemplifies the advantage of
The blood supply in transfusion service is often limited, especially for patients with the D– phenotype, and more so if antibodies to high-prevalence RBC antigens are also present. 10 For the expectant mother in our study, a compatible donor with a U–, D– phenotype is extremely rare, representing <0.1 percent of the African American population. 11 U–, D+ RBC units are also very rare, but there are five to ten times more donors if the D– restriction can be removed.
Supporting every patient who is D+ due to
Studies on cost and financial implications explored the economic aspect of