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Detection and clinical evaluation of antineutrophil antibodies in neonates who had a blood transfusion or exchange transfusion
Author(s) -
Ören Hale,
Duman Nuray,
Anal Özden,
Özkan Hasan,
İrken Gülersu
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
pediatrics international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.49
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1442-200X
pISSN - 1328-8067
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-200x.2005.02109.x
Subject(s) - medicine , antibody , clinical significance , exchange transfusion , neutropenia , blood transfusion , immunology , toxicity
Background: The aim of this study was to detect and investigate the clinical effects of antineutrophil antibodies in neonates who had received a blood transfusion or exchange transfusion.Methods: Venous blood samples were drawn from 34 neonates at pretransfusion (sample 0), immediately after transfusion (sample 1), 2–3 weeks (sample 2) and 8–12 weeks (sample 3) after transfusion. Ten healthy neonates were in the control group. Antineutrophil antibodies were detected using flow cytometric assay.Results: Antineutrophil antibody was detected in the sera of 20 (58.8%) neonates in the study group. Of these 20 neonates, nine had antineutrophil antibodies in serum samples 0, 1 and 2, which were probably due to the passive transfer of maternal antibodies. Nine neonates had antineutrophil antibodies in serum samples 1 and 2, which were probably due to neutrophil antibodies being present in the donor's blood. In two neonates, antineutrophil antibodies were not detected in samples 0 and 1, but appeared in sample 2, which were probably actively produced by the neonates. All of the antineutrophil antibodies disappeared in the serum samples, except in one neonate. Only one preterm newborn developed neutropenia, which resolved spontanously in a week. The presence of antineutrophil antibody in transfused neonates was significantly higher than in non‐transfused neonates.Conclusions: The presence of neutrophil specific antibodies in transfused neonates is not rare and antineutrophil antibodies may be found more often in transfused neonates compared to non‐transfused neonates. The clinical significance of those antibodies needs to be assessed since they are transient and their clinical effects are not evident.

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