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. 2008 Oct;6(4):225-34.
doi: 10.2450/2008.0021-08.

The persistence of red cell alloantibodies

Affiliations

The persistence of red cell alloantibodies

Roberto Reverberi. Blood Transfus. 2008 Oct.

Abstract

Background: Red cell alloantibodies may disappear over time and cause a delayed haemolytic reaction if their past existence is not known before a transfusion. Only few quantitative data have already been presented on this topic.

Study design and methods: We retrieved the records of alloantibodies detected between 1989 and 2008 in our institution. All warm-reacting alloantibodies were included, with the exception of ABO antibodies, anti-D in women of childbearing age (it was impossible to rule out Rh prophylaxis) and antibodies produced by transfusion-dependent beta-thalassaemia patients (their transfusion history was too unusual).

Results: We found 673 antibodies, produced by 525 patients, which had been tested again after the initial detection. The median follow-up was 319 days. The overall rate of non-persistence was 37%, corresponding to 251 antibodies, produced by 216 patients. Non-persistent antibodies were associated with a longer follow-up (409 vs. 236 days; p=0.012), more tests after detection (2 vs. 1; p<0.001), and a lower maximum score (2+ vs. 3+; p<0.001). Antibody specificity, too, influenced the duration of persistence. Among common antibodies, anti-D was the most long-lived (14% non-persistence); anti-Jka the most short-lived (43% non-persistence). Antibodies detected in the second decade of the study were less persistent (p<0.001). They were also weaker (maximum score: 2+ vs. 3+; p<0.001). This probably reflects the increased sensitivity of the screening tests over the course of time. Age, sex and whether the patient had produced multiple alloantibodies were not significant covariates. A minority of non-persistent antibodies (33/251, 13%) were detected again after a negative result (intermittently-detected antibodies). They had a longer follow-up (885 vs. 341 days; p=0.002), more tests after detection (5 vs. 2; p<0.001), and a higher maximum score (3+ vs. 2+; p=0.001).

Conclusions: Red cell antibodies commonly disappear. To avoid delayed haemolytic reactions, it is necessary to rely on previous records, which should be readily available.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Frequency distribution of length of follow-up (from the first positive test to the last test). 319 (47%) antibodies were followed-up for 1 year or more; 57 (8.5%) for 10 years or more
Figure 2
Figure 2
Kaplan-Meier estimate of the "survival" curve of all antibodies (N=673). 50% of antibodies disappear within 1300 days (3 years and 7 months, approximately)
Figure 3
Figure 3
Survival curves of antibodies, stratified by period of detection. - : first decade; - : second decade. Antibodies detected during the second decade had a significantly faster rate of disappearance (Cox regression analysis, p < 0.001)
Figure 4
Figure 4
Survival curves of antibodies, stratified by maximum score. - : ++++; - : +++; ··· : ++; ··· : +. The rate of disappearance increases as the maximum score decreases (Cox regression analysis, p<0.001)
Figure 5
Figure 5
Survival curves of antibodies, stratified by antibody specificity. Only a few representative specificities are shown: - : anti-D; - : anti-E; ··· : anti-K; ··· : unidentified; - ·: anti-Jka; - ·: anti-M

Comment in

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