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  • Title: Warm red blood cell autoantibodies and clinical diagnoses in patients with or without autoimmune hemolysis.
    Author: Kruhonja Galic Z, Jagnjic S, Bingulac-Popovic J, Planinc Peraica A, Hecimovic A, Strauss Patko M, Jukic I.
    Journal: Transfus Clin Biol; 2020 Feb; 27(1):25-29. PubMed ID: 31708346.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVES: Red blood cell autoantibodies (RBC autoAbs) of IgG class are found in the majority of patients with warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia (wAIHA) but sometimes also during the pretransfusion testing of patients with different diagnoses but without hemolysis. The aim of the study was to identify the main differences between these two groups of patients according to age, gender, subclass and titer of IgG RBC autoAbs and diagnosis. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In the 9-year retrospective study, data were collected from records of 291 patients with IgG RBC autoAbs detected by gel technique, from which 111 with wAIHA. RESULTS: More than 85% of patients in both groups were over 40 years old, with male to female ratio 1:1.9 in wAIHA vs 1:1.3 in patients without hemolysis (P=0.0916). The main characteristics of patients with wAIHA vs patients without hemolysis were: IgG only 38% vs 70%, IgG+Complement 62% vs 30%, total IgG1 79% vs 55%, IgG1+IgG3 35% vs 11%, titer of 100 for IgG1+IgG3 17% vs 3% (P<0.0001), respectively, while titer of 100 for IgG1 18% vs 9% (P=0.0241). The underlying diagnosis in wAIHA vs patients without hemolysis: hematologic disorders 41% vs 22% (P=0.0006), autoimmune disorders 12% vs 13% (P=0.8033), solid tumors 5% vs 14% (P=0.0154) and surgery procedures 6% vs 26% (P<0.0001). CONCLUSION: We observed more wAIHA patients with high titer of IgG1 and high prevalence of IgG1+IgG3 and consider that patients without hemolysis having identical results might be interesting to find out how they are protected from damage by RBC autoAbs.
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