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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Anti-FEA 1 antibodies in cats after first blood transfusion

By Cannavino, Alyssa et al.Ā·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgeryĀ·2022Ā·Department of Clinical Sciences, CanadaĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Characterization of post-transfusion anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies in transfusion-naive FEA 1-negative cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A cat that had never received a blood transfusion developed a serious reaction after getting FEA 1-positive blood. This cat, which was FEA 1-negative, started producing antibodies against the transfused blood as soon as five days later. The antibodies were detected for over a year, indicating that even cats that have never been transfused can have reactions if they receive the wrong blood type. This case highlights the importance of blood typing and crossmatching before any transfusion to prevent such reactions in cats.

People also search for: cat blood transfusion reaction Ā· FEA 1-negative cat transfusion Ā· cat blood type testing

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to characterize anti-feline erythrocyte antigen (FEA) 1 alloantibodies following sensitization of FEA 1-negative cats, including their rate of appearance, agglutination titer over time and immunoglobulin class. A secondary aim was to obtain polyclonal anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies to increase the availability of FEA 1 blood typing. We also describe a case study documenting an acute hemolytic transfusion reaction in a transfusion-naive FEA 1-negative feline patient that received FEA 1-positive blood. METHODS: In this prospective clinical study, 35 cats with blood group type A underwent extensive blood typing for FEA 1-5. Two cats were identified as FEA 1-negative; these cats were transfused uneventfully with 50 ml of FEA 1-positive, but otherwise compatible, packed red blood cells. Post-transfusion blood samples were collected routinely as long as anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies were detected. Appearance of anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies was detected using a gel column crossmatch method. RESULTS: Anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies were detected as early as 5 days post-transfusion and remained detectable for over 400 days in one cat. Agglutination titers in both cats were relatively weak (1:1 to 1:8). The main immunoglobulin class was IgM. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Transfusion of FEA 1-negative, transfusion-naive cats with FEA 1-positive blood results in production of post-transfusion anti-FEA 1 alloantibodies as early as 5 days post-transfusion. Our results confirm the potential immunogenicity of FEA 1 and support crossmatching prior to a blood transfusion, even in transfusion-naive cats. Further studies are needed to better document the clinical importance of these post-transfusion antibodies, as well as to facilitate routine blood typing for the FEA 1 antigen in cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35510900/