Abstract

Background Currently, maternal Rh-D antibody levels are primarily used to triage which alloimmunized women warrant enhanced surveillance with middle cerebral artery Doppler. Traditionally, maternal Rh-D antibody levels ≤15 IU/ml have indicated, at worst, mild anaemia and provided reassurance. This threshold has not been widely studied. Methods A prospective cohort study of all intrauterine fetal transfusions (IUT) for Rh-D alloimmunization performed at our tertiary fetal medicine unit from 1996–2011. Fetal haemoglobin (Hb) levels at the time of IUT were adjusted for gestational age (multiples of median [MoM]) and correlated with the maternal serum Rh-D antibody level taken on the day of IUT, or ≤2 weeks prior to the transfusion. Results 260 IUTs were performed, of which 195 were for Rh-D alloimmunzation in 82 pregnancies. No significant correlation was demonstrated between fetal Hb and serum antibody levels (Spearman r = 0.08; p = 0.35). Rates of mild (0.65–0.84 MoM), moderate (0.55–0.64 MoM) and severe ( 15 IU/ml for detecting any fetal anaemia ( 15 IU/ml detecting moderate-severe anaemia ( 8 IU/ml, the sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV of maternal serum antibody levels detecting any fetal anaemia were 96%, 5%, 85% and 17% respectively. Conclusion The widely used Rh-D threshold of >15 IU/ml may miss a substantial proportion of cases of fetal anaemia.

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