Patient ABO blood type is a major predictor of a positive DAT following a transfusion reaction
- PMID: 35836408
- DOI: 10.1111/trf.17019
Patient ABO blood type is a major predictor of a positive DAT following a transfusion reaction
Abstract
Background: A direct antiglobulin test (DAT) checks for antibody or complement on the surface of RBCs and is often done following a transfusion reaction. While passive anti-A and anti-B antibodies are known to cause positive DATs, the extent this occurs following transfusion is unknown.
Study design and methods: DAT results, ABO type, eluate information, and blood product information were recorded on 1097 transfusion reactions at a large academic hospital over 8 years. The effect of patient blood type, product type, and plasma compatibility of blood product transfused on DAT results were determined. Statistical significance was determined using Chi-squared testing.
Results: Patient ABO blood type was a strong predictor of a positive DAT, with type O patients having 6.7% positive rate and non-O patients having a positive rate of 20.6% (p < .0001). Plasma compatibility of the product was a strong predictor of a positive DAT, with plasma compatible transfusions having a 9.4% positive rate while plasma incompatible transfusions were positive 44% of the time (p < .0001). Elution studies found that anti-A/B antibodies were the most common antibody identified. Platelets were more likely to be associated with a positive DAT when compared with RBC transfusions (p < .05).
Conclusions: These results demonstrate the patient ABO type and plasma incompatibility are strong predictors of positive DAT results following a transfusion reaction. Anti-A and anti-B antibodies are estimated to account for about 50% of positive DATs in this study.
Keywords: DAT; transfusion reactions.
© 2022 AABB.
References
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