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The significance of a positive DAT in thalassemia patients

Paid access
|Mar 2020

Abstract

The DAT is performed for the detection of antibody or complement on the surface of RBCs. Our institution previously performed DATs on all chronically transfused thalassemia patients before each transfusion episode to detect early alloimmunization. The medical records of all thalassemia patients treated at our institution from 2004 to 2007 were reviewed to determine the significance of the high rate of positive DATs (52.5% of 80 patients). The majority of IgG-reactive DATs were associated with a nonreactive eluate (65.4% of 286 eluates performed). A positive DAT was significantly associated with splenectomy (χ2 = 15.4; p < 0.001), elevated IgG levels (χ2 = 26.8; p < 0.001), HCV (χ2 = 20.7; p < 0.001), and warm autoantibody (χ2 = 5.87; p = 0.03). Multivariate analysis revealed that only HCV (OR, 5.0; p = 0.037) and elevated IgG levels (OR, 9.0; p = 0.001) were independently associated with a positive DAT. Alloimmunized thalassemic patients were more likely to have a positive DAT than nonalloimmunized patients, but this association was not significant (OR, 2.2; p = 0.11). A positive DAT did not correlate with decreased response to transfusion, RBC survival, hemolysis, or increased transfusion requirements. Only two cases of early alloimmunization were detected by DAT among 288 DAT-positive samples studied during 4 years. This study demonstrated that the routine performance of DATs on pretransfusion specimens in thalassemic patients has limited clinical utility, and the elimination of this test will improve turnaround time and decrease costs. Immunohematology 2010;26:87–91.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/immunohematology-2019-207 | Journal eISSN: 1930-3955 | Journal ISSN: 0894-203X
Language: English
Page range: 87 - 91
Published on: Mar 14, 2020
Published by: American National Red Cross
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2020 S.A. Arinsburg, D.L. Skerrett, D. Kleinert, P.J. Giardina, M.M. Cushing, published by American National Red Cross
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.