Asian Journal of Transfusion Science (Jan 2013)

Transfusion reaction in a case with the rare Bombay blood group

  • Hayedeh Javadzadeh Shahshahani,
  • Mohamad Reza Vahidfar,
  • Seyed Ali Khodaie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0973-6247.106754
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 86 – 87

Abstract

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Bombay phenotype is extremely rare in Caucasian with an incidence of 1 in 250,000. When individuals with the Bombay phenotype need blood transfusion, they can receive only autologous blood or blood from another Bombay blood group. Transfusing blood group O red cells to them can cause a fatal hemolytic transfusion reaction. In this study, we report a case with the rare Bombay blood group that was misdiagnosed as the O blood group and developed a hemolytic transfusion reaction. This highlights the importance of both forward and reverse typing in ABO blood grouping and standard cross-matching and performing standard pretransfusion laboratory tests in hospital blood banks.

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