Abstract

BackgroundTransfusion is a lifesaving treatment for lots of patients. However, in chronic blood recipients such as thalassemia patients, there are high concerns about alloantibody production that affects the quality of their life. Therefore, research on risk factors of alloimmunization has been started and followed. This study aimed at the determination of correlation probability between some HLADRB1 alleles and alloimmunization in Iranian thalassemia patients. Materials and methodsThe present study was conducted on 60 alloimmunized and 60 non-alloimmunized transfusion-dependent thalassemia patients. Antibody screening and identification tests were carried out using the tube method, and HLA-DRB1 genotyping was done using a single specific primer-polymerase chain reaction (PCRSSP). ResultsThe results of antibody screening showed that the most prevalent alloantibodies were Anti-K (46.7 %), and followed by Anti-E (32.5 %), Anti-C (15.8 %), Anti-D (13.3 %), Anti-e (8 %), and Anti-c (5.8 %), respectively. DRB1*07:01 was detected more in non-responder patients (28.3 %). However, data analysis showed that there is no significant relationship between DRB1*07:01, *10, *13:01 frequency among responder and non-responder groups (p = 0·195, 0.648, 0.402, respectively). There was not any significant correlation between HLA-DRB1*10 and *13:01 allele and alloimmunization. There was a significant association between HLA-DRB1*12 and alloimmunization (p < 0·05, OR = 2.071, CI: 1.716–2.501). ConclusionThe findings of this study represented that there is a significant relationship between HLADRB1*12 and Kell and E alloantibodies. Although more developed studies on other HLA alleles are demanded, these findings can be valuable in determining important alloimmunization risk factors to better management of transfusion complications.

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