Rhesus Alloimmunisation Flashcards
1
Q
From what gestational age does a foetus have red cell antigens?
A
- 7 weeks
2
Q
How can pregnant women undergo primary immunisation to red cell antigens?
A
- Blood/transfusion/needle sharing
- Feto-maternal haemorrhage
- Miscarriage
- Termination
- Ectopic
- APH
- Amniocentesis
- Version
- MVA
- Delivery
- Occult (idiopathic - increasing frequency and volume with gestation, usually sensitises after 28 weeks)
3
Q
List some red cell antigens that can have important sequelae if present in a pregnant women. Which are the more harmless ones?
A
- Important
- Rhesus (C/c, D,d, E,e)
- Kell, Kidd, Duffy,
- MNS
- Normally harmless
- ABO
- Lewis
- P
4
Q
What is the difference between autoimmunity and alloimmunity?
A
- Autoimmunity
- Mother makes antibody to own antigen
- Thyroid
- Connective tissue diseases
- ITP
- Mother makes antibody to own antigen
- Alloimmunity
- Mother makes antigens to antigens she does not have
- Red cell antibodies
- NAIT
- Mother makes antigens to antigens she does not have
5
Q
How is screening for red-cell antibodies undertaken with a pregnant woman?
A
- All pregnancies screened for anti-RBC antibodies at first antenatal visit
- First pregnancy - risk stratification by titre
- Partner grouping - calculating chance that the foetus has Rhesus protein based on father/mother genetics
- Subsequent screening by titre stratified risk
6
Q
How is screening performed for low, medium and high risk pregnant woman in terms of RBC antibodies and their complications?
A
- Low risk - antibody titre at each visit, deliver at 38 weeks
- Medium risk - titre at each visit, MCA peak flow scan (indicator of anaemia - faster flow), CTG from 32 weeks (sinusoidal trace), deliver at 38 weeks
- High risk - US screening from 17 weeks, foetal blood sampling if MCA PSV increased, intrauterine blood transfusion (irradiated) if anaemic (only at tertiary centre)
7
Q
How is red-cell alloimmunisation prevented?
A
- Women under 50 have blood transfusion matched to ABO, Rh, and Kell (others difficult to match)
- Passive anti-D
- To be given only within the first 72 hours of a sensitising event
- Indications
- Administration of anti-D to Rh- women after sensitising events
- Administration to Rh- women at 28 at 34 weeks
- Administration to Rh- women post delivery
- Volume
- Small titre (doesn’t affect foetus)
- Kleihauer if sensitising event (estimated foetal blood in maternal circulation)