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Weak D type 67 in four related Canadian blood donors Cover

Weak D type 67 in four related Canadian blood donors

Paid access
|Oct 2019

Abstract

Correct donor D typing is critical to prevent recipient alloimmunization. No method can detect all variants, and the immunogenicity of many variants is unknown. Routine ABO and D serologic typings are performed in our laboratory by automated microplate testing. Until 2011, routine confirmation of D– status of first-time donors was performed by the manual tube indirect antiglobulin test (IAT); this was replaced by automated solid-phase testing including weak D testing by IAT. Selected donors are investigated by other methods. We describe four weak D type 67 (RHD*01W.67) donors whose samples tested as D– by automated microplate and manual methods but were later determined to be D+ by automated solid-phase and RHD gene analysis. Solid-phase serologic and molecular typing results of all four donors were identical. It was identified that the donors are of English-Irish descent; two are brothers and the others are cousins. Transfusion of blood from one of these donors likely resulted in alloimmunization to D in one of three recipients tested since no other documented exposures were identified. Lookback studies determined that two other D– recipients were not alloimmunized. Immunohematology2015;31:159–162.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/immunohematology-2019-086 | Journal eISSN: 1930-3955 | Journal ISSN: 0894-203X
Language: English
Page range: 159 - 162
Published on: Oct 26, 2019
Published by: American National Red Cross
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2019 P. Berardi, E. Bessette, M. Ng, N. Angus, D. Lane, L. Gariepy, K. Pavenski, G. Ochoa-Garay, J. Cote, M. Goldman, published by American National Red Cross
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.