Fetal and neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia: No evidence of systemic inflammation as a modulator of disease severity. Could placental inflammation be key?

Author:

Böhm David1,Wienzek‐Lischka Sandra12,Cooper Nina12,Berghöfer Heike1,Müller Katja1,Bayat Behnaz1,Bein Gregor12ORCID,Sachs Ulrich J.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Clinical Immunology, Transfusion Medicine, and Haemostasis Justus Liebig University Giessen Germany

2. German Center for Fetomaternal Incompatibility (DZFI) University Hospital Giessen and Marburg Giessen Germany

3. Department of Thrombosis and Haemostasis University Hospital Giessen and Marburg Giessen Germany

Abstract

SummaryIn fetal/neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia (FNAIT), maternal alloantibodies against paternal human platelet antigens (HPA) cross the placenta and lead to platelet destruction. The extent of thrombocytopenia varies among neonates, and inflammation may constitute an important trigger. A set of stable inflammatory markers was measured in serum samples from neonates with low platelet counts, of which n = 50 were diagnosed with FNAIT due to anti‐HPA‐1a antibodies and n = 50 were thrombocytopenic without detectable maternal HPA antibodies. Concentrations of C‐reactive protein, soluble CD14, procalcitonin, and sFlt‐1 did not differ between the two cohorts. There was no correlation between C‐reactive protein or soluble CD14 and the platelet count, but a negative correlation between procalcitonin concentrations and the neonatal platelet count in both cohorts. sFlt‐1 concentration and the platelet count were correlated in FNAIT cases exclusively. None of the inflammatory markers was statistically different between cases with and without intracranial haemorrhage. We were unable to identify systemic inflammation as a relevant factor for thrombocytopenia in FNAIT. The antiangiogenic enzyme sFlt‐1, released by the placenta, did correlate with the platelet count in FNAIT cases. Our findings may give rise to the hypothesis that placental inflammation rather than systemic inflammation modulates disease severity in FNAIT.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology

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