The Molecular face of red cells
Refers to the detection of the molecular basis of an antigen rather than the antigen itself Prerequisites: Knowledge of the molecular structure Appropriate genotyping methods
Is there a need? What are the potential advantages? Is it sustainable? Service / research mode?
25 year old - aplastic anemia O pos few years ago – transfused 25 units of red cells / PRCs etc Now requires a transfusion
O Rh Negative Done on 3 different platforms, using different antisera History – No transplant
Patient is convinced we have gooooofed – wants an explanation
27 year old 4th pregnancy at 10 weeks of gestation 1 miscarriage, 2 deaths with severe hydrops Blood group – O Rh negative, ICT, antibody screen Pos. Anti D – titre 1:256
What will the fate of this pregnancy be ?
Fetal DNA analysis Typing multiply transfused Serological discrepancies – weak D / ABO Subgroups / AIHA with pos DAT …… QC of antibody screening /ID RBCs Routine phenotyping of red cells
Products of Genes Antigens carried by proteins – direct products of genes- Rh / Kell Antigens carried by Carbohydrates – under the control of genes coding for the glycosyl transferases – ABO / H
Mostly SNPs Single amino acid differences
Multiple alleles can code for a single same antigen!!!!! Events other than SNPs in the same region – can affect antigen expression Hence incomplete genotyping may not correlate with phenotyping
Greatest Contribution to health care – in pregnancy To assess if a D negative Mother is carrying a D positive baby If mother unsensitised – Anti D given only if baby is Rh positive If mother sensitised – impact on clinical follow up
Previously fetal DNA testing done on Amniocentesis samples Now - found that sufficient amount of fetal DNA is present in sera of mothers About 3-10% of free plasma DNA in pregnant mothers is fetal. Clears rapidly post pregnancy
Occurs due to apoptosis and necrosis etc of placental tissue Part of a process of physiological remodelling Results in ffDNA getting released into maternal plasma
1 st trimester Average 17 weeks
Akolekar et al – 11 – 13 weeks of pregnancy High throughput robotic technique 100% pos predictive value 96.5% negative predictive value Cardo et al - sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 93%, with a 97% diagnostic accuracy for RhD genotyping first trimester of pregnancy using a quantitative PCR
Compared to post natal serology Muller et al – 2008 >1000 typings 25 weeks of pregnancy >99.6% concordance
Real time PCR The luminex platform Automated High throughput analysers using these technologies available Blood chip technology
Cannot be typed by serology – mixed field reaction seen DNA from WBC – Accurate type Epithelia also can be used Helps select blood for transfusion
Likely to be sensitised Worth antigen matching If sensitised – can attempt to antigen match henceforth – to prevent further sensitisation