Abstract

CD5 B cells and the natural autoantibodies they produce play a role in antigen presentation, tolerance induction, and maintenance of an idiotypic immune network. The effects of transfusion on autoantibodies and peripheral blood CD5 B cells were studied. Eight previously transfused patients with sickle cell anemia and five patients who underwent orthopedic surgical procedures with transfusion were enrolled in the study. Patients in both groups received 1 to 2 units of allogeneic packed red cells. Ten untransfused healthy adults and five patients who underwent orthopedic surgery without transfusion were enrolled as controls. Peripheral blood CD5 B cells, serum levels of IgM, antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, and anticardiolipin IgM were quantitated either at the beginning of the study (baseline sample), before transfusion, or before surgery and either at 1-, 2-, 4-, 6-, and 8-week intervals after transfusion, after surgery, or after the baseline sample was obtained. IgM levels and the absolute number of B cells that coexpressed CD5 rose to twice pretransfusion levels in six of eight transfused sickle cell anemia patients and in four of five transfused orthopedic surgery patients. No comparable increases in CD5 B cells were noted in untransfused controls. Preexisting rheumatoid factor and antinuclear antibody levels increased in four of five transfused orthopedic surgery patients. One sickle cell anemia patient developed anti-Fya despite receiving Fya-negative blood. Increasing titers of anti-Fya paralleled the increases in IgM and CD5 B cells after transfusion. One patient who developed a positive direct antiglobulin test after transfusion had large increases in serum anticardiolipin IgM. Anticardiolipin IgM was subsequently eluted from direct antiglobulin test-positive red cells obtained after transfusion. Antibodies with anti-Fya-like activity and anticardiolipin IgM were produced in vitro by CD5 B cells and not by conventional CD5-negative B cells. An association was found between transfusion-induced increases in CD5 B cells and increased autoantibody production. These data may have implications for immunologic intervention to prevent the induction of red cell antibodies and other changes in the immune system caused by exposure to foreign antigens via blood transfusion.

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