For patients who require a blood product transfusion, an important step taken prior to the transfusion of any blood product is compatibility testing between the recipient’s serum and the blood product being transfused. In addition to the ABO and Rh system there are 34 other recognized blood group antigen systems by the International Society of Blood Transfusion.1 Identifying the blood product antigens to which the transfusion recipient will have an immune reaction is a critical component of this compatibility testing, though for most patients identification of ABO and Rh compatibility is sufficient.2 However, for patients who have alloantibodies or patients who have a predisposition to develop alloimmunization (e.g., patients with sickle cell disease and others who are chronically transfused), compatibility testing of additional systems may be needed.2,3 Hemagglutination has traditionally been the most common serologic method of determining a blood product phenotype. In this technique, the patient’s RBCs are tested with antisera specific for the antigens of interest.2,4 However, this method has limitations. It requires direct agglutination typing sera for the antigen, and hemagglutination testing results are not meaningful if a patient has a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT).3,4 In addition, serologic phenotyping is likely to be erroneous in the transfused patient who may have persistent donor blood products in circulation, such as patients getting chronic frequent transfusions, and it has been suggested that chronically transfused patients or patients who have had a massive transfusion should not receive phenotyping using serological methods, or that if serological methods are used, they should be confirmed with molecular techniques.3,5
Because molecular genotyping is not subject to the limitations of conventional serologic testing, the transfusion community has recognized molecular typing as a potential tool to aid in the determination of immune compatibility between donated blood products and the transfusion recipient in a number of circumstances where conventional methods may not be adequate, such as in patients who have a positive direct antigen test, in patients who have been recently transfused or those who are chronically transfused,6 in patients where a distinction between autoantibodies and alloantibodies is needed, or in situations where the presence of a weakly reactive anti-body is suspected.2,3,7,8
Prior to broad clinical availability of molecular genotyping in the United States, a number of studies demonstrated both the feasibility of this technique and the incremental information it could provide over serologic typing in limited clinical contexts.
As early as 1999, a study from Germany in patients receiving chronic transfusions demonstrated disparate molecular Rh phenotyping in 7 of 27 patients compared to serologic typing.9 Soon afterwards, Reid et al6 demonstrated that Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) from blood samples could be used to genotype patients who had recently been transfused. Castilho et al10 confirmed the unreliability of serologic testing when they showed that 6 of 40 molecular genotypes differed from serologic phenotypes in multiply transfused sickle cell anemia (SCA) patients10, and in 9 of 10 alloimmunized thalassemic patients.11 A number of investigators have replicated these findings, most notably Bakanay et al12 when they demonstrated genotypic and phenotypic discrepancies in 19 or 37 multi-transfused patients in multiple alleles. The discrepancies aided in the selection of antigen-matched blood products and improved RBC survival, ultimately improving patient care. A recent case report by Wagner5 highlighted the practical utility of molecular testing over serologic testing for chronically transfused patients.
In a prospective observational study, Klapper et al13 used the HEA BeadChip™ to provide extended human erythrocyte antigen (xHEA) phenotyped donor units and recipient patient samples. XHEA-typed units were assigned to pending transfusion requests using a web-based inventory management system to simulate blood order processing at four hospital transfusion services. The fraction of requests filled (FF) in 3 of 4 sites was > 95% when matching for ABO, D and known alloantibodies, with a FF of > 90% when additional matching for C, c, E, e, and K antigens. The most challenging requests came from the fourth site where the FF was 62 and 51% respectively, even with a limited donor pool. A small prospective observational study by Da Costa et al 14 found that 21 of 35 sickle cell anemia (SCA) patients had discrepancies or mismatches, mainly in the Rh, Duffy, Jk and MNS blood groups, between the genotype profile and the serologically-matched blood unit for multiple antigens. These authors report that their genotype-matching program resulted in elevated hemoglobin levels, increased time between transfusions and prevented the development of new alloantibodies.
Two papers showed the feasibility of routinely applying molecular blood banking techniques in a hospital transfusion service. Routine RBC testing has been implemented in a large tertiary care hospital in Los Angeles, CA to maximize efficient use of blood units.15 Patients with warm or cold reacting autoantibodies, patients with SCA and patients with antibodies that could not be identified were molecularly genotyped and received molecularly matched blood from the hospital’s genotyped donor inventory. The practical implementation of molecular erythrocyte antigen typing was described for a large hospital in Cleveland, OH;16 pre-transfusion molecular typing is performed on chronically transfused patients, patients with autoantibodies, multiple antibodies, when no antigen specific antibody is available for testing and to solve laboratory discrepancies. The authors note that the major benefit of molecular typing is its application for patients who cannot be typed by serology due to an unsuitable sample. Valid results can be obtained even when they have been transfused within a few days of testing or have been massively transfused. Samples selected for molecular testing were based on an algorithm.
The emergence of novel medications, particularly monoclonal antibodies, has also created challenges for serologic phenotyping methods. Two recent research studies have demonstrated that treatment with daratumumab, a CD38 monoclonal antibody, can bind to CD38 expressed on the surface of RBCs and interferes with serologic testing, thereby preventing cross match.17 More recent evidence suggests that treatment with Hu5F9-G4, an IgG4 monoclonal antibody targeting CD47 also interferes with pretransfusion testing.18