Ghevaert C, Rankin A, Huiskes E, Porcelijn L, Javela K, Kekomaki R, Bakchoul T, Santoso S, Nutland S, Smyth DJ, Smith GA, McBride S, Watkins NA, Ouwehand WH. Alloantibodies against low-frequency human platelet antigens do not account for a significant proportion of cases of fetomaternal alloimmune thrombocytopenia: evidence from 1054 cases.
Transfusion 2009;
49:2084-9. [PMID:
19500319 DOI:
10.1111/j.1537-2995.2009.02246.x]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Maternal alloantibodies against the five common human platelet antigen (HPA) systems (HPA-1 to -3, -5, and -15) are found in only 20% of cases referred for fetal and neonatal thrombocytopenia (FMAIT) investigations. The question asked was whether mismatches for the remaining 11 low-frequency HPAs (HPA-4 and -6bw to -17bw) might in part explain the remaining 80% of cases.
STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS
A total of 1054 paternal DNA samples from referred FMAIT cases (among which 223 cases where antibodies against a common HPA were found) were genotyped for 11 low-frequency HPAs as well as a recently discovered polymorphism (ITGA2B-C2320T). The initial genotyping was carried out by TaqMan and potential heterozygotes were confirmed by DNA sequencing. Clinical and serologic data were collected for each case with a heterozygote father.
RESULTS
In total, eight heterozygous fathers were identified: four for HPA-6w, one each for HPA-10w and -11w, and two for HPA-12w. Maternal antibodies against the corresponding antigen were identified in four of the eight cases. In two of these cases, antibodies against HPA-1a and HPA-1b were also found.
CONCLUSION
It was concluded that the minor alleles of HPA-4 and -6bw to -17bw are exceptionally rare in the Caucasian population and therefore do not explain the large number of FMAIT referrals which test negative for the common HPA antibodies.
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