Abstract

SummaryFetal neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (FNAIT) is caused by maternal alloantibodies directed against the human platelet antigens (mostly HPA‐1a or HPA‐5b) of the (unborn) child and can lead to severe bleeding. Anti‐HPA‐1a‐mediated FNAIT shows a severe clinical outcome more often than anti‐HPA‐5b‐mediated FNAIT. Given the relatively high prevalence of anti‐HPA‐5b in pregnant women, the detection of anti‐HPA‐5b in FNAIT‐suspected cases may in some cases be an incidental finding. Therefore we investigated the frequency of anti‐HPA‐5b‐associated severe bleeding in FNAIT. We performed a retrospective nationwide cohort study in cases with clinical suspicion of FNAIT. HPA antibody screening was performed using monoclonal antibody‐specific immobilisation of platelet antigens. Parents and neonates were typed for the cognate antigen. Clinical data were collected by a structured questionnaire. In 1 864 suspected FNAIT cases, 161 cases (8·6%) had anti‐HPA‐1a and 60 (3·2%) had anti‐HPA‐5b. The proportion of cases with severe bleeding did not differ between the cases with anti‐HPA‐1a (14/129; 11%) and anti‐HPA‐5b (4/40; 10%). In multigravida pregnant women with a FNAIT‐suspected child, 100% (81/81) of anti‐HPA‐1a cases and 79% (38/48) of anti‐HPA‐5b cases were HPA‐incompatible, whereas 86% and 52% respectively were expected, based on the HPA allele distribution. We conclude that anti‐HPA‐5b can be associated with severe neonatal bleeding symptoms. A prospective study is needed for true assessment of the natural history of anti‐HPA‐5b mediated FNAIT.

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