Red cell alloimmunisation in patients with different types of infections

Publication date

2016-12

Authors

Evers, Dorothea
van der Bom, Johanna G
Tijmensen, Janneke
Middelburg, Rutger A
de Haas, Masja
Zalpuri, Saurabh
De Vooght, Karen M KISNI 0000000391368072
van de Kerkhof, Daan
Visser, Otto
Péquériaux, Nathalie C V

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Red cell alloantigen exposure can cause alloantibody-associated morbidity. Murine models have suggested that inflammation modulates red cell alloimmunisation. This study quantifies alloimmunisation risks during infectious episodes in humans. We performed a multicentre case-control study within a source population of patients receiving their first and subsequent red cell transfusions during an 8-year follow-up period. Patients developing a first transfusion-induced red cell alloantibody (N = 505) were each compared with two similarly exposed, but non-alloimmunised controls (N = 1010) during a 5-week 'alloimmunisation risk period' using multivariate logistic regression analysis. Transfusions during 'severe' bacterial (tissue-invasive) infections were associated with increased risks of alloantibody development [adjusted relative risk (RR) 1·34, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0·97-1·85], especially when these infections were accompanied with long-standing fever (RR 3·06, 95% CI 1·57-5·96). Disseminated viral disorders demonstrated a trend towards increased risks (RR 2·41, 95% CI 0·89-6·53), in apparent contrast to a possible protection associated with Gram-negative bacteraemia (RR 0·58, 95% CI 0·13-1·14). 'Simple' bacterial infections, Gram-positive bacteraemia, fungal infections, maximum C-reactive protein values and leucocytosis were not associated with red cell alloimmunisation. These findings are consistent with murine models. Confirmatory research is needed before patients likely to develop alloantibodies may be identified based on their infectious conditions at time of transfusion.

Keywords

red blood cell alloimmunisation, blood transfusion, infections, inflammation, humans, Taverne, Journal Article, Multicenter Study

Citation

Evers, D, van der Bom, J G, Tijmensen, J, Middelburg, R A, de Haas, M, Zalpuri, S, de Vooght, K M K, van de Kerkhof, D, Visser, O, Péquériaux, N C V, Hudig, F & Zwaginga, J J 2016, 'Red cell alloimmunisation in patients with different types of infections', British Journal of Haematology, vol. 175, no. 5, pp. 956–966 . https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.14307