Chapter 3 Blood Banking Reagents Flashcards

1
Q

What are four different categories of reagents for blood banking?

A

4 basic categories of reagents for blood banking:
1. RBCs with known antigens
2. Antisera with known antibodies
3. Antiglobulin reagents: anti-IgG and / or complement
4. Potentiators to enhance antibodies.

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2
Q

Who licenses reagents for the blood bank?

A

Commercial blood banking reagents are licensed by the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (Food and Drug Administration [FDA]).

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3
Q

What are the FDA’s criteria for blood banking reagents?

A

The FDA’s criteria can be found in the Code of Federal Regulations.

Reagents must meet min standards before being licensed:
1. Specificity -recognition of the antigenic determinant and its corresponding antibody.
2. Potency - strength of the reaction (e.g. anti-A and anti-B are made to agglutinate to 3+ and 4+).

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4
Q

Name 3 main components of a QC program for reagent quality.

A

QC Program (Blood bank)
1. Statement of the criteria for acceptable reagent performance.
2. Documentation of reagent use
3. Corrective actions for lack of performance.

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5
Q

What are Polyclonal antibodies?

A

Polyclonal antibodies:
1. Made from several different clones of B cells that secrete antibodies of different specificities
2. Produced by immunizing rabbits with purified human IgG molecules
3. Recognize multiple epitopes

Example: antihuman globulin (AHG)

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6
Q

What are Monoclonal antibodies?

A

Monoclonal antibodies:
1. Made from single clones of B cells that secrete antibodies of the same specificity
2. Use hybridoma technology
3. Recognize a single epitope

Examples: anti-A, anti-c, and anti-IgG antibodies

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7
Q

What antigen is Anti-A antisera directed against?

A

Antisera are directed toward specific antigens on the patient’s RBCs
Anti-A: directed toward A antigen
Anti-B: directed toward B antigen

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8
Q

Your have one antisera is that is blue and the other yellow, what type are they?

A

Antisera is Colour Coded as follows:
Anti-A contains blue dye
Anti-B contains yellow dye

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9
Q

What does it mean to do an immediate spin?

A

Testing is performed in the immediate-spin (IS) phase since A and B antibodies are IgM. IgM antibodies prefer binding at room temperature or lower.

Immediate spin means spinning at 3400rpm for 15 seconds after adding the antisera to the sample. We just want the cells to get close to each other to allow lattice formation if the antibodies in the reagent bind to antigens on the cell surface.

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10
Q

What does it mean to do forward typing? reverse typing?

A

Forward typing is when you add antisera to the patient’s red cells to see if it agglutinates or not.

Reverse typing is when you add commercial red cells to patient’s plasma containing their antibodies to confirm the forward typing.

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11
Q

What antibodies should have Type A blood person have in their plasma?

A

A type A person should have B antibodies in their plasma.

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12
Q

The Rh group blood system contains several antigens, why is the D antigen the most important?

A

The Rh blood group system contains several antigens, but the D antigen is the most important because of increased immunogenicity.

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13
Q

When do you determine if the person is type D or not?

A

The Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion Services requires that all blood samples be typed for the D antigen (recipients, donors, and expectant females).

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14
Q

Why is a negative reagent control perform during typing for D in the Rh blood group?

A

When Commercial anti-D is combined with the patient and donor RBCs any agglutination is significant.

A negative reagent control ensures that a false-positive result has not occurred.

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15
Q

What is the Rh control for anti-D?

A

The Rh control includes all the other ingredients that are found in the D antisera minus the actual antibodies. Occasionally a person will have something that causes agglutination without having the antigen present. We expect a negative result in the control vial (patient cell and control). If there is agglutination in the control we cannot interpret the D results.

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16
Q

What is the difference between low protein and high protein antisera? Which one is used and why?

A

High-Protein Reagents:
1. Contain polyclonal antibodies,
2. Approximately 20% bovine albumin
Low-Protein Reagents;
1. Contain monoclonal antibodies (IgM) or monoclonal and polyclonal blends (to detect Weak D)
2. Approximately 6% bovine albumin

High protein reagents tend to promote false-positive agglutination so therefore low protein reagents are used. The low protein reagents do not necessarily always need a control to be run for each patient sample.

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17
Q

What are the ingredients in the Rh negative control?

A

Contains everything found in anti-D reagent except the antibody:
- Buffered saline solution
- Bovine serum albumin
- EDTA
- 0.1% sodium azide (preservative)

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18
Q

What causes a false positives to anti-D (or other antisera)?

A

False-positive agglutination can result from
Strong cold autoantibodies
Protein abnormalities

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19
Q

When is a separate control used for Anti-D forward typing?

A

When is a separate control used?
1. A separate control is used if RBCs agglutinate with all ABO antisera.
2. A separate control is not needed if there is a negative result using any of the ABO low-protein reagents.

20
Q

What are reagent RBCs?

A

Commercial reagent RBCs contain known antigens to confirm the presence of antibodies in patient serum or plasma

21
Q

What are the characteristics of A1 and B commercial red cells to have?

A

Can be from a single donor or a pool of donors
Washed and re-suspended to a 2% to 5% concentration
Negative for Rh antigens (D, C, and E)
Should be a 2+ to 4+ grading

22
Q

Name some reasons give for why commercial red cells may lyze?

A

Commercial Red cells lyze over time due to:
- Age, short life span
- Frozen in transport
- Mixed too harshly

23
Q

How can you tell if a vial of commercial red cells have lyzed and how can that affect the results of reverse typing?

A

The supernatant in the vial will start looking reddish.

If too many cells lyze you will get a weakened reaction and may miss agglutination, resulting in a false negative result.

24
Q

What are screening cells?

A

Screening cells are used in antibody screen (detection) tests for clinically significant, unexpected antibodies. They are group O red cells to prevent any interference from naturally occurring antibodies.

25
Q

What comes with each screening cell reagent?

A

• Each lot of screening cells comes with an antigram that shows the antigen profile
• The cells must express antigens associated with the most clinically significant antibodies
• Screening cells are regulated by the FDA for: D, C, E, c, e, M, N, S, s, P1, Lea, Leb, K, k, Fya, Fyb, Jka, and Jkb
• 7 different blood group systems
• Will detect presence of all clinically significant antibodies

26
Q

What are panel cells?

A

Used when the antibody screen is positive to identify the specific antibody(ies) present –> Antibody panel

27
Q

Describe a lot of panel cells - what comes with it and group type are they made from?

A

Each lot of panel cells will have an antigram that shows the antigenic profile of each vial.
Are group O red cells with varying antigenic expression of other blood group systems

28
Q

What is an antiglobulin test?

A

Commercial antibody with a specificity toward human globulins is used to agglutinate antibody-coated (sensitized) RBCs.

29
Q

What do antiglobulin test reagents contain? How is it created?

A

Antiglobulin Test Reagent contains antibodies toward:
• IgG (anti-IgG) and/or
• Complement (anti-C3d and anti-C3b)
• Created by injecting human IgG and/or complement (C3d and C3b) into rabbits

30
Q

Give four reasons for a positive DAT (Direct Antiglobulin Test)?

A

A positive DAT could result from the following scenarios;
1. Transfusion reaction - donor cells coated w/ IgG
2. Hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn - fetal RBC coated with IgG
3. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia - IgG or C3 on patients RBCs
4. Drug-related mechanism - IgG drug complex attached to RBCs.

31
Q

How times are the RBC’s washed for the DAT and why?

A

Washed x 4 with saline. Decanting the saline each time. This would get rid of any residual plasma, unattached antibodies, extra proteins, etc. Now we have the patient’s red cells that may have IgG and/or complement binding to them.

32
Q

What is the indirect Antiglobulin test (IAT)?

A

INDIRECT Antiglobulin Tests
• Detects IgG bound to RBCs in vitro (outside the body)
o This test uses the patient’s plasma.

33
Q

What are applications for the IAT?

A

IAT is used for:
1. Antibody screening
2. Antibody identification
3. Cross-match
4. Antigen typing.

34
Q

What is polyspecific AHG?

A

Polyspecific AHG:
• Contains both anti-IgG and anti-C3d antibodies
• Derived from polyclonal or monoclonal sources

35
Q

What is monospecific AHG?

A

Monospecific AHG:
Contains either anti-IgG or anti-C3b/C3d, but not both
C3d is usually the only complement protein that will remain attached to RBC

36
Q

When is a differential DAT performed?

A

Differential DAT is an immunohematologic test that uses monospecific anti-IgG and monospecific anti-C3d/anti-C3b reagents to determine the cause of a positive DAT with polyspecific antiglobulin reagents.

37
Q

When are IgG sensitized check cells used?

A

IgG sensitized check cells used:
1. Required as a control system when AHG results are negative
2. When added to a negative AHG test, reagent should cause agglutination as they will bind with free AHG. Should be 2+

38
Q

What are some causes for a false negative DAT or IAT?

A

False-negative results are caused by
1. Failure to add the AHG reagent
2. Failure of the AHG reagent to react
3. Failure to wash the RBCs adequately (neutralization)

39
Q

What is neutralization?

A

Neutralization can occur if we did not wash well enough and causes false negatives. If there is lots of left-over antibodies present in the tube the anti-human globulin will bind with them.

If there is a great deal of unbound antibodies it will tie up all the AHG and we won’t get lattice formation or see agglutination.

40
Q

What are potentiators?

A

Potentiators: Reagents that enhance the detection of IgG antibodies by enhancing uptake and/or promoting direct agglutination.

41
Q

List the various potentiators that can be used and the main reason it is used?

A
  1. Low Ionic Saline Solution (LISS) - has clusters of free Na+ and Cl- ions around RBCs that maintains RBC integrity while helping with antibody uptake (sensitization)
  2. Polyethylene Glycol (PEG) - Water soluble polymer that removes water from the test mixture, therefore increasing the concentration of the antibody for better antibody detection
  3. Proteolytic Enzymes - Modifies RBC membrane by removing negatively charged molecules, reducing the zeta potential, does not work in all cases to help agglutination.
  4. Bovine Serum Albumin - Allows antibody-sensitized cells to come closer together than is possible with saline and hence helps with lattice formation.
42
Q

What are lectins?

A

Lectins are not potentiators
• Seed extracts that have specificity toward certain RBC antigens (mimic antibodies)
• Bind to carbohydrate determinants of RBC antigens
They mimic antibodies.

43
Q

Describe gel technology for agglutination testing?

A

• Uses dextran acrylamide gel particles to trap agglutinated cells
• Gel particles are combined with reagents and pre-dispensed in microtubes of plastic cards
• RBCs or plasma/serum are added to the microtube and allowed to incubate before centrifugation
• Large agglutinates are trapped at the top of the microtubes (4+)
• Nonagglutinated cells travel unimpeded to the bottom of the microtube (0)
• Eliminates variation in tube shaking between technologists

44
Q

Describe the microplate method of agglutination testing?

A

• A 96-well microtiter plate replaces test tubes
• Applies same principle as test tube method
• A concentrated button indicates a reaction
• Dispersed cells indicate no reaction

45
Q

Describe the solid phase method of agglutination testing?

A

Solid Phase:
1. Uses microplate wells with immobilized reagent
2. Cells that adhere to the sides and bottom of the wells are POSITIVE
3. Cells that settle to the bottom of the wells are NEGATIVE