Rhesus Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Define Rhesus Disease.

A

Development of rhesus antibodies in a RhD -ve mother post-exposure to RhD +ve blood cells/antigens.

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2
Q

What are the risk factors for rhesus disease?

A
  • Previous pregnancy with insufficient anti-D prophylaxis
  • Previous blood transfusion (rare if in UK)
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3
Q

What is the pathophysiology of rhesus disease?

A
  1. Rh -ve mother has a Rh +ve child
  2. Sensitising event mixes blood - simple SVD is not a sensitising event
  3. Mother develops IgM anti-Rh ABs (IgM doesn’t affect 1st baby as IgM cannot cross placenta)
  4. Mother delivers or miscarries child
  5. Time passes (and mother develops IgG anti-Rh ABs)
  6. Mother has a 2nd Rh +ve child
  7. Mother’s IgG anti-Rh crosses placenta → hydrops fetalis
    1. If child is Rh -ve, there is no problem. However, we assume they are Rh +ve just in case
    2. cffDNA testing can test for the child’s Rh status which reduce the need for anti-D

Pathophysiology = IgG anti-Rh ABs against foetal RBCs → HDN = anaemia + high BR → hydrops fetalis, foetal anaemia, kernicterus

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4
Q

What are the sensitising events for rhesus disease?

A
  • PSE = Potentially Sensitising Event
    • Amniocentesis, CVS
    • APH/PV bleed in pregnancy
    • ECV
    • Abdominal trauma (T3: 26-37 weeks)
    • Ectopic pregnancy
    • Intrauterine death & stillbirth/TOP/molar pregnancy
    • Intrauterine (transfusion, surgery)
    • Therapeutic miscarriage (any GA, any method)
    • Intra-operative cell salvage
    • Spontaneous miscarriage (>12w GA)
    • Delivery (SCD, CS, instrumental)
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5
Q

What are the appropriate investigations for rhesus disease?

A
  • Father status - what blood type could the baby inherit
  • Baby status - cffDNA testing
  • Mother’s anti-RhD levels - higher = worse
  • Kleiheur test - only >20w
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6
Q

What is the routine antenatal anti-D prophylaxis?

A
  • Indirect antiglobulin testing at booking
  • If indicated either:
    • 2 doses of 500 IU at 28 and 34 weeks
    • 1 dose of 1500 IU at 28 weeks
  • If mother is found to be RhD -ve and has antibodies at booking → monitor titres and if they peak above a level → monitor baby using Middle Cerebral Artery dopplers weekly → if baby affected, consider IU transfusion
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7
Q

What is the prophylactic management for rhesus disease after a sensitising event?

A
  • <72 hours of event → Kleihauer-Bekte (+125 IU IM/1mL foetal blood)
    • 250 IU <20 weeks
    • 500 IU >20 weeks
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8
Q

What are the complications of rhesus disease?

A
  • Hydrops fetalis
  • Intrauterine death
  • Neonatal kernicterus
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