Mixed-field ABO front typing as an early sign of disease recurrence in ABO-matched stem cell transplantation

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Abstract

ABO group testing is critical for allogeneic stem cell transplantation because mismatches can cause both transfusion and engraftment challenges. Even with ABO-matched donor-recipient pairs, ABO group determination may provide valuable insight into allograft status. Herein, we report a case of a 76-year-old female patient with myeloid neoplasm who underwent ABO-matched stem cell transplantation and in whom mixed-field ABO antigen expression during routine follow-up testing post-transplantation was the first sign of a change in transplant graft status; the mixed-field findings pre-dated changes in formal chimerism testing. This case underscores the potential of mixed-field ABO typing as an early indicator of disease recurrence in ABO-matched stem cell transplants and suggests that, in such cases, more sensitive forms of chimerism testing and/or closer monitoring for disease recurrence, particularly in the clinical setting of myeloid neoplasms, may be warranted.

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APA

Yurtsever, N., Lee, E. S., Pinatti, L., Shah, B., Tormey, C. A., & Siddon, A. J. (2024). Mixed-field ABO front typing as an early sign of disease recurrence in ABO-matched stem cell transplantation. Immunohematology, 40(3), 89–92. https://doi.org/10.2478/immunohematology-2024-013

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