Background: Accurate D antigen identification is essential for pretransfusion and prenatal evaluation to prevent anti-D alloimmunization. Quantitative and qualitative D variants may pose typing problems and require particular consideration because of differing potential for anti-D induction.
Study design and methods: A novel partial D, DWI, was discovered in an anti-D-alloimmunized D+ Austrian woman. This D variant was investigated by RHD genotyping and nucleotide sequencing, as well as characterization of its serologic properties.
Results: The proposita exhibited a single-nucleotide exchange in RHD Exon 7 (1073T>C) predicting a Met358Thr substitution in the sixth extracellular loop of the RhD polypeptide. All DWI individuals identified (the proposita and two relatives) were genotyped DWIdCcee, which, together with the family tree, was highly suggestive of a DWICe haplotype association. Epitope mapping studies revealed only minor D antigen modification with weakening but not loss of epitopes D1.1, D9.1, and D16.1. Antigen density varied individually between 8000 and 8600 D sites per erythrocyte. No known low-frequency Rh antigen was detected. Despite the highly retained D epitope composition, the DWI proposita's serum sample contained alloanti-D from an immunization event many years earlier.
Conclusion: The findings of this investigation emphasize the possible clinical significance of "high-grade" partial D variants that are likely to be missed by routine serology.