Abstract

Plain Language SummaryThe identification of antibodies to human platelet antigens (HPA) is crucial. The standard test (MAIPA assay) is difficult because it requires fresh platelets from specific donors. This study investigated a new method, monoclonal antibody immobilization of megakaryocyte antigens (MAIMA), using in vitro generated megakaryocytes from CD34+ cells. The assay was tested against WHO reference reagents and patient samples with known anti-HPA antibodies. Results showed that MAIMA successfully detected anti-HPA-1a antibodies and correlated well with MAIPA. However, MAIMA had lower sensitivity for anti-HPA-3a and anti-HPA-5b antibodies. Notably, anti-HPA-5b antibodies were not detectable by MAIMA. In conclusion, in vitro generated megakaryocytes can effectively detect anti-HPA-1a antibodies. However, MAIMA may be less suitable for antibodies against other HPAs, such as HPA-5b. This study highlights the potential of MAIMA as an alternative assay and provides insight into its strengths and limitations in detecting specific anti-HPA antibodies.

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