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Use of a phycoerythrin‐conjugated anti‐glycophorin A monoclonal antibody as a double label to improve the accuracy of FMH quantification by flow cytometry
Author(s) -
Paul Lloyd-Evans,
A. R. Guest,
E. B. Austin,
Marion L. Scott
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
transfusion medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.471
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1365-3148
pISSN - 0958-7578
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-3148.1999.00187.x
Subject(s) - phycoerythrin , monoclonal antibody , flow cytometry , cytometry , microbiology and biotechnology , labelling , chemistry , monoclonal , conjugate , antibody , chromatography , medicine , biology , immunology , biochemistry , mathematical analysis , mathematics
The use of flow cytometry for quantifying fetomaternal haemorrhage is increasing, and has been shown to be more accurate than the Kleihauer–Betke test for evaluating larger bleeds of over 4 mL in volume. Red cells are stained with fluorescently labelled monoclonal anti‐D. Cells for analysis are normally gated manually on the basis of forward and side scatter. We investigated whether the use of an antiglycophorin A monoclonal antibody conjugate (red cell specific) in a dual labelling technique would improve the gating of RBC and FMH quantification. Mixes of adult rr and cord R 1 r RBC were prepared to simulate 1, 0.5, 0.25, 0.12 and 0.06% fetal bleeds. Phycoerythrin‐conjugated BRIC 256 (mouse monoclonal antiglycophorin A) was used to label all RBC, and FITC‐BRAD‐3 monoclonal anti‐D was used to determine the proportion of D‐positive cells. Results from the dual labelling experiments were compared to those from single labelling of the same mixtures with FITC‐BRAD‐3 alone, using gated and ungated data. The results showed that single labelling with manual gating gave falsely low FMH estimates. We conclude that use of a fluorescently labelled antiglycophorin A antibody improves the accuracy of the FMH measurement by flow cytometry, as manual subjective gating of RBC excludes a higher proportion of fetal than of adult RBC.