Anti-IgA Antibodies in Pregnancy

Abstract
A survey of 28,000 pregnant women revealed an incidence of IgA deficiency (serum IgA <1 mg per deciliter) of 1 in 450, which is identical to that in a normal blood-donor population of both sexes. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in a study of 61 serum samples from IgA-deficient pregnant women, we observed antibodies to IgA2 alone in 20 per cent, as compared with 7.5 per cent of pregnant women not deficient in IgA and no IgA-deficient blood donors. Antibodies reacting with IgA1 alone were present in occasional serum samples (2 to 7 per cent) from all groups studied, and class-specific anti-IgA antibodies were present in 17 per cent of IgA-deficient blood donors and in 16 per cent of IgA-deficient pregnant women. Blocking experiments showed that some serum samples contained an antibody that reacted with both IgA1 and IgA2, whereas others contained two antibodies, one reacting with IgA1 and the other with IgA2. The anti-IgA2 antibodies tended to diminish in titer after delivery. The ELISA was, as expected, more sensitive than the hemagglutination assay.