Phenotyped red cell components are used to:
Patients who have a clinically significant antibody or have a history of a clinically significant antibody, should be provided with red cells negative for the relevant antigen.
The table below shows red cell antigens that are known to stimulate clinically significant antibodies and the frequencies of corresponding antigen-negative phenotypes:
| Antibody | Frequency of antigen-negative phenotype |
|---|---|
| D | 21.0% |
| C | 34.7% |
| c | 20.8% |
| E | 73.1% |
| e | 2.4% |
| K | 92.5% |
| k | 1.6% |
| Jka | 23.0% |
| Jkb | 27.8% |
| S | 50.0% |
| s | 9.2% |
| U | 0.1% (rare) |
| Fya | 31.0% |
| Fyb | 24.1% |
A full list of major blood group phenotypes can be found here.
For patients who have non-clinically significant antibodies, the red cells don’t need to be antigen-negative for the corresponding antibody.
The following table provides a list of antigens that stimulate antibodies generally considered not to be clinically significant and the associated frequencies of antigen-negative phenotypes:
| Antibody | Frequency of negative phenotype |
|---|---|
| A1 | 67% |
| CW | 98% |
| Kpa | 97.6% |
| M | 20.0% |
| N | 29.8% |
| P1 | 21.0% |
| Lea | 77.6% |
| Leb | 27.7% |
| Lea+b | 6.0% |
| Lua | 92.3% |
| Wra | 99.9% |
For patients with rare red cell phenotypes or who have multiple clinically significant antibodies, Lifeblood may not have suitable red cell units immediately available in it's inventory. If so, we can source appropriate units by:
Transfusion laboratories may find our Red Cell Phenotype Calculator useful when determining blood requirements for transfusion or communicating blood availability to clinicians as part of the clinical decision-making process.