Validation of a flow‐cytometry‐based red blood cell antigen phenotyping method

Author:

Liwski Robert12,Clarke Gwen34ORCID,Cheng Calvino12,Abidi Syed Sibte Raza5,Abidi Samina Raza6,Quinn Jason George12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

2. Nova Scotia Health Authority Central Zone Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

3. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Canadian Blood Services Edmonton Alberta Canada

5. NICHE Research Group, Faculty of Computer Science Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

6. Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesCurrent manual and automated phenotyping methods are based on visual detection of the antigen–antibody interaction. This approach has several limitations including the use of large volumes of patient and reagent red blood cells (RBCs) and antisera to produce a visually detectable reaction. We sought to determine whether the flow cytometry could be developed and validated to perform RBC phenotyping to enable a high‐throughput method of phenotyping using comparatively miniscule reagent volumes via fluorescence‐based detection of antibody binding.Materials and MethodsRBC phenotyping by flow cytometry was performed using monoclonal direct typing antisera (human IgM): anti‐C, ‐E, ‐c, ‐e, ‐K, ‐Jka, ‐Jkb and indirect typing antisera (human IgG): anti‐k, ‐Fya, ‐Fyb, ‐S, ‐s that are commercially available and currently utilized in our blood transfusion services (BTS) for agglutination‐based phenotyping assays.ResultsSeventy samples were tested using both flow‐cytometry‐based‐phenotyping and a manual tube standard agglutination assay. For all the antigens tested, 100% concordance was achieved. The flow‐cytometry‐based method used minimal reagent volume (0.5–1 μl per antigen) compared with the volumes required for manual tube standard agglutination (50 μl per antigen)ConclusionThis study demonstrates the successful validation of flow‐cytometry‐based RBC phenotyping. Flow cytometry offers many benefits compared to common conventional RBC phenotyping methods including high degrees of automation, quantitative assessment with automated interpretation of results and extremely low volumes of reagents. This method could be used for high‐throughput, low‐cost phenotyping for both blood suppliers and hospital BTS.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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