Delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction
Delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction
Updated: 07/25/2025
© Jun Wang, MD, PhD
General features
- Occur 24 hours after transfusion
- Usually IgG mediated extravascular hemolysis
- More commonly minor blood type-related, including Kidd, Duffy, Kell
- Patients exposed to foreign non-ABO antigens by prior transfusion, etc
Clinical presentations
- May be asymptomatic
- Usually mild symptoms
- May have mild fever and anemia
- Mild jaundice
Key pathogenesis
- Antibodies formed following exposure to foreign RBC antigens
- Levels of antibodies declined to undetectable level for screening test
- Exposure to the same foreign antigen results in rapid antibody against donor RBCs
- RBCs coated with IgG removed by mononuclear phagocyte system, commonly in liver and spleen
- Rarely antibody can form during the first exposure
Laboratory findings
- Anemia
- Evidence of hemolysis: hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuria, elevated bilirubin, LDH, etc
- Positive DAT
- Spherocytes
- New antibody identified
Management
- Usually no treatment necessary
- Treat as acute hemolytic transfusion reaction if severe and intravascular
- Treat anemia if symptomatic
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