Cold Agglutinin Test
🧊 Cold Agglutinin Test: Complete Guide (Causes, Method, Interpretation)
✔ Hemolytic anemia · Complement-mediated RBC destruction · Immune-hematology essentials
1. What Are Cold Agglutinins?
Cold agglutinins are autoantibodies (mostly IgM) that bind to red blood cells (RBCs) at low temperatures (4–10°C), resulting in RBC clumping and complement activation.
🔍 Key Characteristics
- Predominantly IgM autoantibodies
- Bind to RBC surface antigens at low temperature
- Activate complement (C3) → intravascular or extravascular hemolysis
- Dissociate at 37°C, so warming often reverses RBC clumping
- Can appear in infection, lymphoproliferative disease, or primary cold agglutinin disease (CAD)
🔍 Effects on RBCs
- RBC agglutination → instrument error on automated hematology analyzers
- ↓ RBC count
- ↑ MCV (pseudo-macrocytosis)
- ↑ MCHC (spurious elevation)
- Severe cases: finger/toe cyanosis due to increased blood viscosity
2. Purpose of the Cold Agglutinin Test
✔ Main Clinical Purposes
- Detect and measure cold agglutinin titer
- Diagnose Cold Agglutinin Disease (CAD)
- Evaluate hemolytic anemia of unclear etiology
- Aid in diagnosing:
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection
- EBV infectious mononucleosis
- Avoid ABO mismatch or crossmatch issues in the blood bank
- Investigate RBC agglutination observed on peripheral smear
✔ When the Test Is Ordered
- Unexplained hemolytic anemia: ↑LDH, ↑indirect bilirubin, ↓haptoglobin
- RBC agglutination noted on blood film
- Suspected atypical infection (M. pneumoniae, EBV)
- Autoimmune hemolytic anemia work-up
3. Test Method (Principle & Procedure)
3-1. Principle
- Patient serum is mixed with reagent RBCs at 4°C
- Visible agglutination indicates presence of cold agglutinins
- The highest dilution with visible agglutination = titer
3-2. Procedure Outline
1) Sample handling
- Collect blood while maintaining 37°C (warm tube/water bath)
- Prevents in-vitro agglutination before testing
- Warm sample thoroughly before analysis
2) Cold incubation at 4°C
- Mix patient serum + test RBCs
- Incubate and observe for agglutination
3) Titer measurement
- Perform serial dilutions (e.g., 1:2 → 1:4 → 1:8 …)
- Highest dilution showing agglutination = cold agglutinin titer
3-3. Impact on Automated CBC
Cold agglutinins commonly cause:
- ↓ RBC count
- ↑ MCV
- ↑ MCHC
Warm incubation at 37°C for 10–15 minutes usually corrects these values.
4. Reference Range
| Test | Normal Range | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Cold Agglutinin Titer | ≤ 1:16 | Present in healthy individuals at very low levels |
| 1:64–1:128 | Mild elevation | Often post-infectious |
| ≥ 1:256 | Clinically significant | Suggestive of CAD |
| ≥ 1:512 | Strong positivity | High risk of hemolysis |
Cutoff values may vary slightly by laboratory.
5. Clinical Significance
✔ High Titer → Associated Conditions
1) Cold Agglutinin Disease (CAD)
- Monoclonal IgM autoantibody
- Complement-mediated hemolysis
- Acrocyanosis (cold-induced color change in fingers/toes)
2) Infectious Diseases
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae (anti-I antibody)
- EBV / Infectious mononucleosis
- Influenza, CMV, HIV
3) Lymphoproliferative Disorders
- Lymphoma
- Waldenström macroglobulinemia
- CLL
4) Autoimmune or Chronic Disorders
- Autoimmune diseases
- Liver disease
6. Interpretation Guide
✔ Low titer (≤1:16)
- Often normal
- No clinical concern
✔ Mild elevation (1:64–1:128)
- Possible recent infection
- Rarely causes clinically relevant hemolysis
✔ High titer (≥1:256)
- Suggestive of CAD
- Evaluate hemolysis markers:
- ↑ LDH
- ↑ indirect bilirubin
- ↑ reticulocytes
- ↓ haptoglobin
✔ Very high titer (≥1:512)
- Strong complement activation
- May cause acute hemolysis, especially in Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection
7. Important Precautions in Interpretation
1) Temperature management is critical
- Improper sample transport causes false-positive RBC clumping
- Maintain sample at 37°C until processing
2) Interpret with Direct Coombs test (DAT)
- CAD: DAT positive for C3d, negative for IgG
- Helpful in differentiating from warm AIHA
3) Post-infectious titer elevation
- Peaks within 1–2 weeks
- Returns to baseline in 3–6 months
4) Blood bank implications
- May cause ABO typing discrepancies
- Pre-warm technique may be required for crossmatch
5) CBC artifacts
- RBC ↓, MCV ↑, MCHC ↑ → classic cold agglutinin pattern
- Warm the sample and repeat the CBC
✔ Summary Table
| Category | Key Points |
|---|---|
| Test Purpose | CAD diagnosis, infection evaluation, RBC agglutination work-up |
| Normal Titer | ≤ 1:16 |
| High Titer | ≥ 1:256 (CAD suspicion) |
| CBC Impact | RBC↓, MCV↑, MCHC↑ |
| Key Precaution | Sample must be kept at 37°C |
📚 References
- Berentsen S. Cold agglutinin disease. Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program. 2016;2016:226–231.
- Swiecicki PL, Hegerova LT, Gertz MA. Cold agglutinin disease. Blood. 2013;122:1114–1121.
- Petz LD. Cold antibody autoimmune hemolytic anemias. Blood Rev. 2008;22:1–15.
- AABB Technical Manual, 20th Edition.
- CLSI. Serologic Testing for RBC Antibodies; Approved Guideline.
