This is the first reported case of life-threatening adverse effects and thrombocytopenia caused by passively transfused anti-CD36 isoantibody. The possibility of passive infusion of this antibody should be considered in the evaluation of life-threatening transfusion reactions followed by thrombocytopenia.
Anti-HLA antibodies reportedly exist in 31% of pregnant women. However, few ocurrences of neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (NAIT) caused by anti-HLA antibody have been reported. In this study, maternal anti-HLA B60 and B61 antibodies were identified in patient serum at birth, but no anti-platelet antibodies were present. No maternal anti-HLA A2, A24, B51, or B52 antibodies were detected in patient serum. Platelet transfusion from the third donor was effective because these platelets expressed HLA A24 and B52 but not B60 or B61. Cross-matching tests between patient leukocytes or platelets and maternal serum were strongly positive, indicating that maternal anti-HLA antibodies were responsible for NAIT. This report is the first to demonstrate NAIT probably caused by maternal anti-HLA A24 and B52.
Plasma containing anti-CD36, implicated in the development of NHTRs, exhibited a platelet-activating capability. Additionally, platelets from healthy human subjects exhibited a considerable degree of heterogeneity in their responsiveness to this plasma. The heterogeneity of these responses may determine the occurrence of anti-CD36-related NHTRs.
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