In 1939
Philip Levine and
Rufus E. Stetson published their findings about a 25-year-old mother who had a
stillborn baby that died of
hemolytic disease of the newborn. Both parents were
blood group O, so the husband's blood was used to give his wife a
blood transfusion due to blood loss during delivery. However, she had a severe
transfusion reaction. Since both parents were blood group O, which was believed to be compatible for transfusion, they concluded that there must be a previously undiscovered blood group
antigen that was present on the husband's red blood cells (RBCs) but not present on his wife's. This suggested for the first time that a mother could make blood group antibodies because of immune sensitization to her
fetus's RBCs as her only previous exposure would be the earlier pregnancy. They did not name this blood group antigen at the time, which is why the discovery of the
rhesus blood type is credited to
Karl Landsteiner and
Alexander S. Wiener with their first publication of
their tables for
blood-typing and cross-matching in 1940, which was the culmination of years of work. However, there were multiple participants in this scientific race and almost simultaneous publications on this topic. Levine published his theory that the disease known as erythroblastosis fetalis was due to Rh alloimmunization in 1941 while Landsteiner and Wiener published their method to type patients for an antibody causing transfusion reactions, known as "Rh". The first treatment for Rh disease was an
exchange transfusion invented by Wiener and later refined by Harry Wallerstein. Approximately 50,000 infants received this treatment. However, this could only treat the disease after it took root and did not do anything to prevent the disease. In 1960,
Ronald Finn, in
Liverpool, England, proposed that the disease might be prevented by injecting the at-risk mother with an antibody against fetal red blood cells (anti-RhD). Nearly simultaneously, William Pollack, (an immunologist and protein chemist at
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation) and John Gorman (blood bank director at Columbia-Presbyterian) with Vincent Freda (an obstetrician at
Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center) came to the same realization in New York City. The three of them set out to prove it by injecting a group of male prisoners at
Sing Sing Correctional Facility with antibody provided by Ortho, obtained by a fractionation technique developed by Pollack. Animal studies had previously been conducted by Pollack using a rabbit model of Rh. This model, named the rabbit HgA-F system, was an animal model of human Rh, and enabled Pollack's team to gain experience in preventing hemolytic disease in rabbits by giving specific HgA antibody, as was later done with Rh-negative mothers. One of the needs was a dosing experiment that could be used to determine the level of circulating Rh-positive cells in an Rh-negative pregnant female derived from her Rh-positive fetus. This was first done in the rabbit system, but subsequent human tests at the University of Manitoba conducted under Pollack's direction confirmed that anti-Rho(D) immune globulin could prevent alloimmunization during pregnancy. Marianne Cummins was the first at-risk woman to receive a prophylactic injection of anti-Rho(D) immune globulin (RhIG) after its regulatory approval. Clinical trials were set up in 42 centers in the US, Great Britain, Germany, Sweden, Italy, and Australia. RHIG was finally approved in the United Kingdom and the United States in 1968. The FDA approved the drug under the brand name RhoGAM, with a fixed dose of 300 μg, to be given within three days (72 hours) postpartum. Subsequently, a broader peripartum period was approved for dosing which included prophylaxis during pregnancy. Within a year, the antibody had been injected with great success into more than 500,000 women.
Time magazine picked it as one of the top ten medical achievements of the 1960s. By 1973, it was estimated that in the US alone, over 50,000 babies' lives had been saved. The use of Rh immune globulin to prevent the disease in babies of Rh negative mothers has become standard practice, and the disease, which used to claim the lives of 10,000 babies each year in the US alone, has been virtually eradicated in the developed world. In 1980,
Cyril Clarke,
Ronald Finn,
John G. Gorman, Vincent Freda, and William Pollack each received an
Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research for their work on rhesus blood types and the prevention of Rh disease. == See also ==