4.7 Article

A screening and intervention program aimed to reduce mortality and serious morbidity associated with severe neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 110, Issue 3, Pages 833-839

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2006-08-040121

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The study's objective was to identify HPA la-negative women and to offer them an inten(ention program aimed to reduce morbidity and mortality of neonatal alloirnmune thrombocytopenia (NAM. HPA 1 typing was performed in 100 448 pregnant women. The HPA1a-negative women were screened for anti-HPA1a. In immunized women, delivery was performed by Cesarean section 2 to 4 weeks prior to term, with platelets from HPA1a-negative donors reserved for immediate transfusion if petechiae were present and/or if platelet count was less than 35 x 10(9)/L. Of the women screened, 2.1% were HPA1a negative, and anti-HIPA1a was detected in 10.6% of these. One hundred seventy pregnancies were managed according to the intervention program, resulting in 161 HPA1a-positive children. Of these, 55 had severe thrombocytopenia (< 50 x 109/L), including 2 with intracranial hemorrhage (ICH). One woman with a twin pregnancy missed the follow-up and had one stillborn and one severely thrombocytope- nic live child. In 15 previous prospective studies (136 814 women) there were 51 cases of severe NAIT (3 intrauterine deaths and 7 with ICH). Acknowledging the limitation of comparing with historic controls, implementation of our screening and intervention program seemed to reduce the number of cases of severe NAIT-related complications from 10 of 51 to 3 of 57.

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