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HDN1

HDN occurs when antibodies produced by the mother cross the placenta and react with the fetal RBCs. 65% of HDN are due to ABO incompatibilities. ABO HDN is less severe than Rh HDN because there is less RBC destruction.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views40 pages

HDN1

HDN occurs when antibodies produced by the mother cross the placenta and react with the fetal RBCs. 65% of HDN are due to ABO incompatibilities. ABO HDN is less severe than Rh HDN because there is less RBC destruction.

Uploaded by

jaep1965
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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| 



 
    

Renee Newman Wilkins, MS, MT(ASCP), CLS(NCA)


CLS 325/435 Clinical Immunohematology
School of Health Related Professions
University of Mississippi Medical Center
O 
| 
' aestruction of the RBCs of the fetus and
newborn by antibodies produced by the
mother
' Only IgG antibodies are involved because it
can cross the placenta (not IgA or IgM)

Fetal =
+ RBC
destruction

Mother¶s
antibodies
ï   

' Although transfer of maternal antibodies is
good, transfer of antibodies involved in HaN
are directed against antigens on fetal RBCs
inherited by the father
' Most often involves antigens of the Rh and
ABO blood group system, but can result from
any blood group system
' Remember: The fetus is ï  for an
antigen and the mother is  for the
same antigen
ï   

' HaN develops in utero
' The mother is sensitized to the foreign
antigen present on her child¶s RBCs usually
through some seepage of fetal RBCs
(       ) or a previous
transfusion
' HaN occurs when these antibodies cross the
placenta and react with the fetal RBCs
 | 
' ABO incompatibilities are the most common
cause of HaN but are less severe
' About 1 in 5 pregnancies are ABO-incompatible
' 65% of HaN are due to ABO incompatibility
' Usually, the mother is type O and the child
has the A or B antigen«Why?
' Group O individuals have a high titer of  
  in addition to having IgM anti-A and anti-B
 | 
' ABO HaN can occur during the FIRST
pregnancy b/c prior sensitization is not
necessary
' ABO HaN is less severe than Rh HaN
because there is less RBC destruction
' Fetal RBCs are less developed at birth, so there
is less destruction by maternal antibodies
' When delivered, infants may present with mild
anemia or normal hemoglobin levels
' Most infants will have hyperbilirubinemia and
jaundice within 12 to 48 hours after birth
 

  | 
' Infant presents with jaundice 12-48 hrs after
birth
' Testing done after birth on cord blood
samples:
' Sample is washed 3x to remove Wharton¶s jelly
' Anticoagulated EaTA tube (purple or pink)
' ABO, Rh and aAT performed
' Most cases will have a positive aAT
' If aAT positive, perform elution to Ia antibody
    | 
' Only about 10% require therapy
' Phototherapy is sufficient
' Rarely is exchange transfusion needed

' Phototherapy is exposure to artificial or


sunlight to reduce jaundice
' Exchange transfusion involves removing
newborn¶s RBCs and replacing them with
normal fresh donor cells
ï   

Fluorescent blue light in the


420-475 nm range

   


O    


' CMV negative
' Irradiated
' Exchange transfusion: Fresh O 
 (to avoid ùCa++), less than 7 days
old
' Intrauterine transfusion: !
' Group O, a-negative (Maternal blood if
possible)
' Leukoreduced
! | 
' Mother is a negative (d/d) and child is a positive
(a/d)
' Most severe form of HaN
' 33% of HaN is caused by Rh incompatibility
' Sensitization usually occurs very late in pregnancy,
so the first Rh-positive child is not affected
' Bleeds most often occur at delivery
' Mother is sensitized
' Subsequent offspring that are a-positive will be affected
About 1 in 10 pregnancies involve an Rh-
negative mother and an Rh-positive father
    |  
' Sensitization occurs as a result of seepage of
fetal cells into maternal circulation as a result
of a fetomaternal hemorrhage
' Placental membrane rupture (7%)
' Trauma to abdomen
' aelivery (>50%)
' Amniocentesis
' Abortion
!

' Rh-negative women can be exposed to Rh-
Positive cells through transfusion or
pregnancy
' Each individual varies in their immune
response (depends on amount exposed to)
' 85%* transfused with 200 mL Rh-positive cells will
develop anti-a
' There is only about a 9%* chance that Rh-neg mothers
pregnant with an Rh-positive child will be stimulated to
produce anti-a (2    RhIg)
*Mollison, PL, Engelfriet, CP & Contreras, M. (1997). 
    
    (ed. 10). London: Blackwell Scientific, p 395.
ï   


' Maternal IgG attaches to antigens on fetal


cells
' Sensitized cells are removed by macrophages in
spleen
' aestruction depends on antibody titer and number
of antigen sites
' IgG has half-life of 25 days, so the condition can
range from days to weeks
' RBC destruction and anemia cause bone
marrow to release erythroblasts, hence the
name ³  


  
Ú)

  !

ï   


' When erythroblasts are


used up in the bone
marrow, erythropoiesis
in the spleen and liver
are increased
' Hepatosplenomegaly
(enlarged liver & spleen)
' Hypoproteinemia (from
decreased liver function)
leads to cardiac failure
edema, etc called
³|
  
Ú

' Hemoglobin is metabolized to bilirubin
' Before birth, ³indirectÚ bilirubin is transported
across placenta and conjugated in maternal liver
(³directÚ) where it is excreted
' After birth, the newborn liver is unable to
conjugate the bilirubin
' Unconjugated (³indirectÚ) bilirubin can reach toxic
levels (18-20 mg/dL)
' This is called   
and can lead to permanent
brain damage
 

    
' Serologic Testing (mother & newborn)
' Amniocentesis and Cordocentesis
' Intrauterine Transfusion
' Early aelivery
' Phototherapy & Newborn Transfusions
 
 
' ABO and Rh testing
' Test for a antigen (test for weak a if initially negative)

' Antibody Screen


' To test detect for IgG alloantibodies that react at 37°C
' If negative, repeat before RhIg therapy and/or if patient is
transfused or has history of antibodies (3rd trimester)

' Antibody Ia
' Weakly reacting anti-a may be due to FMH or passively
administered anti-G (RhIg)
' If antibody is IgG, anti-a is most common followed by anti-K and
other Rh antibodies
 

 !
' Paternal phenotype
' Amniocyte testing
' If mother has anti-a, then father probably is heterozygous for a
antigen
' Amniocytes can be tested as early as 10-12 weeks gestation to
detect the gene for the a antigen and any other antigens
 
 !
' Antibody titration
' Antibody concentration is determined by antibody titration
' Mother¶s serum is diluted to determine the highest dilution that
reacts with reagent RBCs at 37°C (60 min) and AHG phase
' First sample is frozen and run with later specimens
' Testing is repeated at 16 and 22 weeks and 1- to 4- week
intervals after
' A aifference of >2 dilutions; or a score change of more than 10 is
considered a significant change in titer ( 

 )
' A titer of 16-32 is significant
' >16 should be repeated at 18-20 weeks¶ gestation
' >32 indicates a need for amniocentesis or cordocentesis between
18-24 weeks¶ gestation
' <32 is repeated every 4 weeks (18-20 weeks) and every 2-4
weeks (third trimester)
 


' The agglutination reactions for each dilution are given a
corresponding score; scores are added:
' 4+ 12
' 3+ 10
' 2+ 8
' 1+ 5
' w+ 3

1:1 1:2 1:4 1:8 1:16 1:32 1:64


Example:

3+ +3 +3 +2 +2 +2 1+
10 + 10 + 10 + 8 + 8 + 8 + 5
= 59
 


 


' About 18-20 weeks¶


gestation
' Cordocentesis takes a
sample of umbilical vessel to
obtain blood sample
' Amniocentesis assesses the
status of the fetus using
amniotic fluid
' Fluid is read on a
spectrophotometer (350-700
nm)
' Change in optical density
(ǻOa) above the baseline of
450 nm is the bilirubin
measurement
 

   
 !

"Oa
ð  
' The ǻOa is plotted on the Liley graph
according to gestational age
' Three zones estimate the severity of HaN
' Lower: mildly or unaffected fetus (Zone 1)
' Midzone: moderate HaN, repeat testing (Zone 2)
' Upper: severe HaN and fetal death (Zone 3)
ð  

a ǻOa of .206 nm
at 35 weeks
* correlates with
severe HaN
O 
' Intrauterine transfusion is
done if:
' Amniotic fluid ǻOa is in high
zone II or zone III
' Cordocentesis has hemoblobin
<10 g/dL
' Hydrops is noticed on
ultrasound
' Removes bilirubin
' Removes sensitized RBCs
' Removes antibody
   

' Early aelivery


' If labor is induced, fetal lung maturity must be determined
using the lecithin/sphingomyelon (L/S) ratio (thin layer
chromatography) to avoid respiratory distress syndrome
' Phototherapy (after birth)
' Change unconjugated bilirubin to biliverdin
' May avoid the need for exchange transfusion
' Newborn transfusion
' Small aliquots of blood (PediPak)
' Corrects anemia
ï
 

' ABO ± forward only
' Rh grouping ± including weak a
' aAT
' Elution
' aone when a aAT is positive and HaN is
questionable
' Removes antibody from RBC to identify
' Treatment does not change
ï  
' RhIg (RhoGAM®) is given to the mother to
prevent immunization to the a antigen
' ³FoolsÚ mom into thinking she has the antibody
' RhIg (1 dose) is given at 28 weeks¶ gestation
' RhIg attaches to fetal RBCs in maternal
circulation and are removed in maternal spleen;
this prevents alloimmunization by mother
' May cause a positive aAT in newborn (check
history)
ï
  
  ! 

' Another dose of RhIg should be given to the


mother within 72 hours of delivery (even if
stillborn)
' Mother should be a negative
' Newborn should be a positive or weak a
' About 10% of the original dose will be present at
birth, so it¶s important to give another dose to
prevent immunization


' Each vial of RhIg contains enough anti-a to


protect against a FMH of 30 mL
' One vial contains 300 ȝg of anti-a
' Given intramuscularly of intravenously
' Massive fetomaternal hemorrhage (>30 mL)
requires more than one vial
' To assess a FMH, a maternal sample is screened
within 1 hour of delivery (rosette test)
!
 

' A qualitative measure of fetomaternal
hemorrhage

Fetomaternal Hemorrhage:
<1 rosette per 3 lpf = 1 dose of RhIg
>1 rosette per 3 lpf = Quantitate bleed
ù       
' Quantitates the number of fetal cells in
circulation
' Fetal hemoglobin is resistant to acid and retain
their hemoglobin (appear bright pink)
' Adult hemoglobin is susceptible to acid and
leaches hemoglobin into buffer (³ghostÚ cells)
 ù

Step 1) stain and count the amount of
fetal cells out of 1000 total cells counted
Step 2) calculate the amount of fetal  
 
ƒ  
 
blood in cirulation by multiplying %fetal 
   
cells by 50 mL
Step 3) divide mL of fetal blood by 30
(each vial protects against a 30 mL bleed
Step 4) Round the calculated dose up
 add one more vial for safety



  ƒ
¢

  

' RhIg is of no benefit once a person has


formed anti-a
' It is VERY important to distinguish the
presence of anti-a as:
' Residual RhIg from a previous dose OR
' True immunization from exposure to a+ RBCs
' RhIg is not given to the mother if the infant is
a negative (and not given to the infant)
Maternal
Specimen

a Positive a negative

Anti-a present* Cord Blood

Mother not a
candidate for a Negative a Positive
RhIg

Rosette test:
Screens for
FMH

* Make sure presence of anti-a is Negative Positive


not due to antenatal administration
of Rh immune globulin
One vial of RhIg Kleihauer-Betke:
within 72 hours quantitative

Calculate dose
of
RhIg

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