Autoimmune neutropenia in pregnant women causing neonatal neutropenia

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Abstract

Autoimmune neutropenia (AIN) can occur during pregnancy. However, neonatal neutropenia occurring in an infant born to a mother with AIN has only rarely been documented. Recently, we have experienced two cases of AIN during pregnancy, both of which caused severe yet transient neonatal neutropenia (< 0.3 × 109/l), probably as a result of transplacental maternal anti-neutrophil autoantibodies. The anti-neutrophil antibodies seemed to be against antigens other than NA1/NA2 because the autoantibodies did not bind to neutrophils of specific NA types selectively in the granulocyte indirect immunofluorescence test. Although AIN is a relatively uncommon disease, neonatal neutropenia caused by maternal AIN may not be quite as rare.

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Kameoka, J., Funato, T., Miura, T., Harigae, H., Saito, J., Yokoyama, H., … Sasaki, T. (2001). Autoimmune neutropenia in pregnant women causing neonatal neutropenia. British Journal of Haematology, 114(1), 198–200. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2141.2001.02891.x

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