Premium
The evanescence and persistence of RBC alloantibodies in blood donors
Author(s) -
Hauser Ronald G.,
Esserman Denise,
Karafin Matthew S.,
Tan Sylvia,
BalbuenaMerle Raisa,
Spencer Bryan R.,
Roubinian Nareg H.,
Wu Yanyun,
Triulzi Darrell J.,
Kleinman Steve,
Gottschall Jerome L.,
Hendrickson Jeanne E.,
Tormey Christopher A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
transfusion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.045
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1537-2995
pISSN - 0041-1132
DOI - 10.1111/trf.15718
Subject(s) - antibody , medicine , persistence (discontinuity) , blood donor , population , immunology , isoantibodies , donation , blood transfusion , red blood cell , panel reactive antibody , antigen , human leukocyte antigen , geotechnical engineering , environmental health , economics , engineering , economic growth
BACKGROUND Blood donors represent a healthy population, whose red blood cell (RBC) alloantibody persistence or evanescence kinetics may differ from those of immunocompromised patients. A better understanding of the biologic factors impacting antibody persistence is warranted, as the presence of alloantibodies may impact donor health and the fate of the donated blood product. METHODS Donor/donation data collected from four US blood centers from 2012 to 2016 as part of the Recipient Epidemiology and Donor Evaluation Study‐III (REDS‐III) were analyzed. Clinically significant antibodies from blood donors with more than one donation who underwent at least one follow‐up antibody screen after the initial antibody identification were included. Of 632,378 blood donors, 481 (128 males and 353 females) fit inclusion criteria. RESULTS Antibody screens detected 562 alloantibodies, with 368 of 562 (65%) of antibodies being persistently detected and with 194 of 562 (35%) becoming evanescent. Factors associated with antibody persistence included antibody specificity, detection at the first donation, reported history of transfusion, and detection of multiple antibodies concurrently. Anti‐D, C, and Fy a were most likely to persist, while anti‐M, Jk a , and S were most frequently evanescent. CONCLUSIONS These data provide insight into variables impacting the duration of antibody detection, and they may also influence blood donor center policies regarding donor recruitment/acceptance.