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<i>In vitro</i> culture of colony forming unit‐megakaryocyte (CFU‐MK) in fetal alloimmune thrombocytopenia
37
Citations
18
References
1994
Year
Perinatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (PAITP) causes intracranial haemorrhage in the fetus and neonate. However, the severity of the thrombocytopenia correlates poorly with maternal anti-platelet antibody titres. To test the hypothesis that reduced platelet production contributes to fetal thrombocytopenia in PAITP, maternal sera from three HPA-1a-negative mothers whose pregnancies were complicated by anti-HPA-1a (two severe cases, one mild case) were added to colony forming unit-megakaryocyte (CFU-MK) cultures from HPA-1a positive and negative individuals. Sera from the two severely affected pregnancies containing anti-HPA-1a caused 66-100% inhibition of HPA-1a-positive fetal and neonatal CFU-MK, whereas CFU-MK from two HPA-1a-negative mothers were not inhibited by the anti-HPA-1a-containing sera. Maternal serum from the case of mild PAITP caused only mild inhibition of HPA-1a-positive cord and adult CFU-MK and did not inhibit HPA-1a-positive fetal CFU-MK. Taken together, these findings suggest that reduced megakaryocyte production contributes to fetal thrombocytopenia due to maternal anti-HPA-1a antibodies and also that the degree of CFU-MK inhibition correlates with severity of fetal thrombocytopenia.
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