Dealing with a clinically important anti-M case with cross-reactivity induced by monoclonal typing reagent
Keywords:
ABO discrepancy, Anti-M, He antigen, Monoclonal antibodiesAbstract
Introduction: The naturally occurring "Anti-M" antibody, which is usually active at temperatures below 37 °C and has no clinical significance, can lead to discrepancy in ABO blood grouping and confusion in diagnosis. Case Presentation: This paper reports the case of a 28-year-old woman whose unanticipated reaction in her reverse blood grouping was observed due to the presence of anti-M, which made interpretation of her blood group difficult. The reason for this discrepancy created an interesting case to analyze. Take-away Lesson: A laboratory should always choose the reagent that is most suitable to the profiles of patients referred to that laboratory. It should be noted that if an anti-M is found in an M+ patient with negative autocontrol, it is not correct to conclude that there is a "partial M".References
Fung MK. Other blood group systems and antigens. American Association of Blood Banks. Technical manual, Fung MK, Grossman BJ, Hillyer CD, and Westhoff CM. Bethesda: American Association of Blood Banks. 2014: 337-66
Schoeman EM, Roulis EV, Perry MA, Flower RL, Hyland CA. Comprehensive blood group antigen profile predictions for Western Desert Indigenous Australians from whole exome sequence data. Transfusion. 2019 Feb;59(2):768-78. DOI: 10.1111/trf.15047, PMid: 30520525 3)Dean L. Blood groups and red cell antigens. National Center for Biotechnology Information; 2005. 4)Reid ME, Lomas-Francis C, Olsson ML. The blood group antigen factsbook. Academic press; 2012 Nov 7. 5)Shahverdi E, Moghaddam M, Talebian A, Abolghasemi H. Distribution of blood groups in the Iranian general population. Journal of Blood Group Serology and Molecular Genetics Volume 32, Number 4, 2016. 2016 Dec;32(4):135. PMID: 28257227 6)Mitra R, Mishra N, Rath GP. Blood groups systems. Indian J Anaesth. 2014 Sep;58(5):524. doi: 10.4103/0019-5049.144645, PMid: 25535412, PMCid: PMC4260296 7)Issitt PD, Anstee DJ. Applied blood group serology. Durham, NC: Montgomery Scientific Publications; 1998 Jan. 8)Yasuda H, Ohto H, Nollet KE, Kawabata K, Saito S, Yagi Y, Negishi Y, Ishida A. Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn with late-onset anemia due to anti-M: a case report and review of the Japanese literature. Transfus Med Rev. 2014 Jan 1;28(1):1-6. PMID: 24262303, doi: 10.1016/j.tmrv.2013.10.002 9)Poole J, Daniels G. Blood group antibodies and their significance in transfusion medicine. Transfus Med Rev. 2007 Jan 1;21(1):58-71. PMID: 17174221, doi: 10.1016/j.tmrv.2006.08.003 10)Makroo RN, Rajput S, Agarwal S, Chowdhry M, Prakash B, Karna P. Prevalence of irregular red cell antibody in healthy blood donors attending a tertiary care hospital in North India. Asian J Transfus Sci. 2018 Jan;12(1):17. doi: 10.4103/ajts.AJTS_4_17, PMid: 29563670, PMCid: PMC5850692 11)Jaskiewicz E, Jodłowska M, Kaczmarek R, Zerka A. Erythrocyte glycophorins as receptors for Plasmodium merozoites. Parasites & vectors. 2019 Dec;12(1):317. DOI: 10.1186/s13071-019-3575-8, PMid: 31234897, PMCid: PMC6591965
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2020 Knowledge Kingdom Publishing
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.