Hemolysis due to anti-IH in a patient with beta-thalassemia and Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection
Abstract
Anti-IH is a common cold agglutinin that is typically clinically insignificant. We present a case that resulted in hemolysis. A 32-year-old male patient with transfusion-independent beta-thalassemia intermedia presented with symptomatic anemia. His blood sample typed as group B, D+ and demonstrated multiple alloantibodies and cold autoantibodies. He was transfused uneventfully, but re-presented 10 days later with recurrent, worsening anemia. At this time, transfusion of group O, phenotype-matched red blood cells (RBCs) resulted in an acute hemolytic reaction. While anemia was initially attributed to drug-mediated bone marrow toxicit y and subsequently to a delayed hemolytic reaction, further evaluation revealed Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection and a cold agglutinin (anti-IH specificity), indicating a likely autoimmune-mediated anemia due to an infectious etiology. Subsequent transfusion of 2 group B, phenotype-matched RBC units using a blood warmer was uneventful. Anti-IH is only rarely associated with hemolytic transfusion reactions, which may be exacerbated when transfusing group O RBC units to group B patients. M. pneumoniae infection likely led to cold agglutinin–mediated hemolysis of endogenous and transfused RBCs. The patient was successfully managed with intravenous immunoglobulin, steroids, rituximab, erythropoietin, hydroxyurea, and amoxicillin clavulanate/azithromycin. This case illustrates the importance of infectious disease evaluation in patients with unexplained anemia, the potential clinical significance of autoanti-IH, and the value of providing type-specific RBC units in these circumstances.
© 2024 Jennifer N. Chousal, Forough Sargolzaeiaval, Tridu R. Huynh, Mitchell Zhao, Karen Rodberg, Patricia M. Kopko, Srila Gopal, Elizabeth S. Allen, published by American National Red Cross
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.