1. Anti-D in pregnant women with the RHD(IVS3+1G>A)-associated DEL phenotype.
- Author
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Gardener GJ, Legler TJ, Hyett JA, Liew YW, Flower RL, and Hyland CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Australia, Female, Germany, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Phenotype, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic blood, Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic genetics, Pregnant People, Rho(D) Immune Globulin, Young Adult, Isoantibodies blood, Polymorphism, Genetic physiology, Rh-Hr Blood-Group System genetics
- Abstract
Background: Pregnant women with the DEL phenotype appear to be D- by routine serology. Women with DEL phenotypes that show a partial D-like epitope loss may develop anti-D. It has been proposed that this alloantibody could have a deleterious effect with respect to hemolytic disease in the fetus and newborn., Case Reports: Two pregnant women, one in Australia and one in Germany, were serotyped as D- and were sensitized to the D antigen. Noninvasive fetal RHD genotyping was performed to plan pregnancy management., Results: In both cases the fetal RHD status could not be assigned due to the presence of a maternal DEL allele. This was suspected through detection of high RHD amplicon levels during quantitative polymerase chain reaction. For both cases extended molecular typing of the maternal genomic DNA revealed a RHD(IVS3+1G>A) allele. For case one, the D+ infant developed a mild hemolytic disease requiring phototherapy. In the second case a D- (or DEL) newborn was unaffected., Conclusion: Fetal genotyping from maternal plasma reveals RHD variants in pregnant women with anti-D. Fetuses and newborns of sensitized pregnant women carrying the RHD(IVS3+1G>A) allele are at risk of hemolytic disease., (© 2012 American Association of Blood Banks.)
- Published
- 2012
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