Key Information
Source
Year
2026
summary/abstract
Abstract
Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) have an elevated risk for alloimmunization due to frequent transfusions and antigenic disparities with donors. Extended antigen matching beyond Rh (CcEe) and Kell (K) can reduce alloimmunization but is not broadly applied due to logistic and economic challenges. Red cell antigen exposures may be minimized when donor and patient populations are from similar racial and ethnic backgrounds. This study assessed alloantigen exposure across 35 antigens in patients with SCD receiving transfusions from donors self-identifying as Black or Hispanic. Seven hundred units transfused to 28 chronically transfused patients were genotyped using a single nucleotide polymorphism-based assay. Combining Rh and K-matching with donor unit selection from racially similar populations, patients were exposed to an average of 1.6 antigens per transfusion, compared to the previously reported 3.5 exposures per transfusion across the same 35 antigens using a general donor inventory. Among 514 units transfused to Black recipients from Black donors, 22% had no foreign antigen exposure of 35 antigens. The most frequent alloantigen exposures were Jkb, S, and Doa. One clinically significant anti-Jkb formed during the study. These findings suggest combining donor unit selection with blood group genotyping may improve compatibility and transfusion safety for high-risk populations.