The Most Precious Blood on Earth (2024)

His doctor drove him over the border. It was quicker that way: If the man donated in Switzerland, his blood would be delayed while paperwork was filled out and authorizations sought.

The nurse in Annemasse, France, could tell from the label on the blood bag destined for Paris that this blood was pretty unusual. But when she read the details closely, her eyes widened. Surely it was impossible for this man seated beside her to be alive, let alone apparently healthy?

Thomas smiled to himself. Very few people in the world knew his blood type did—could—exist. And even fewer shared it. In 50 years, researchers have turned up only 40 or so other people on the planet with the same precious, lifesaving blood in their veins.

Red blood cells carry oxygen to all the cells and tissues in our body. If we lose a lot of blood in surgery or an accident, we need more of it—fast. Hence the hundreds of millions of people flowing through blood-donation centers across the world, and the thousands of vehicles transporting bags of blood to processing centers and hospitals.

It would be straightforward if we all had the same blood. But we don’t. On the surface of every one of our red blood cells, we have up to 342 antigens—molecules capable of triggering the production of specialized proteins called antibodies. It is the presence or absence of particular antigens that determines someone’s blood type.

If a particular high-prevalence antigen is missing from your red blood cells, then you are “negative” for that blood group. If you receive blood from a “positive” donor, then your own antibodies may react with the incompatible donor blood cells, triggering a further response from the immune system. These transfusion reactions can be lethal.

Because so few people have it, by definition, rare blood is hardly ever needed. But when it is, finding a donor and getting the blood to a patient in crisis can become a desperate race against the clock. It will almost certainly involve a convoluted international network of people working invisibly behind the bustle of “ordinary” blood donation to track down a donor in one country and fly a bag of their blood to another.

* * *

Forty years ago, when 10-year-old Thomas went into the University Hospital of Geneva with a routine childhood infection, his blood test revealed something very curious: He appeared to be missing an entire blood-group system.

There are 35 blood-group systems, organized according to the genes that carry the information to produce the antigens within each system. The majority of the 342 blood-group antigens belong to one of these systems. The Rh system (formerly known as “Rhesus”) is the largest, containing 61 antigens.

The most important of these Rh antigens, the D antigen, is quite often missing in Caucasians, of whom around 15 percent are Rh D-negative (more commonly, though inaccurately, known as Rh-negative blood). But Thomas seemed to be lacking all the Rh antigens. If this suspicion proved correct, it would make his blood type Rhnull—one of the rarest in the world, and a phenomenal discovery for the hospital hematologists.

Rhnull blood was first described in 1961, in an Aboriginal Australian woman. Until then, doctors had assumed that an embryo missing all Rh blood-cell antigens would not survive, let alone grow into a normal, thriving adult. By 2010, nearly five decades later, some 43 people with Rhnull blood had been reported worldwide.

Hardly able to believe what she was seeing, Dr. Marie-José Stelling, then the head of the hematology and immunohematology laboratory at the University Hospital of Geneva, sent Thomas’s blood for analysis in Amsterdam and then in Paris. The results confirmed her findings: Thomas had Rhnull blood. And with that, he had instantly become infinitely precious to medicine and science.

Researchers seeking to unravel the mysteries of the physiological role of the intriguingly complex Rh system are keen to get hold of Rhnull blood, as it offers the perfect “knockout” system. Rare negative blood is so sought after for research that even though all samples stored in blood banks are anonymized, there have been cases where scientists have tried to track down and approach individual donors directly to ask for blood.

And because Rhnull blood can be considered “universal” blood for anyone with rare blood types within the Rh system, its lifesaving capability is enormous. As such, it’s also highly prized by doctors—although it will be given to patients in only extreme circ*mstances, and after very careful consideration, because it may be nigh on impossible to replace. “It’s the golden blood,” says Dr. Thierry Peyrard, the current director of the National Immunohematology Reference Laboratory in Paris.

Blood groups are inherited, and Rhnull is known to run in families. So the next step for the hematologists in Geneva was to test Thomas’s family in the hope of finding another source, particularly as Thomas wouldn’t be able to donate until he turned 18. Things looked even more hopeful when it turned out Thomas’s grandfathers were third-degree cousins. But the tests showed Thomas’s Rhnull blood was due to two completely different random mutations on both sides. Pure chance, twice over, in the face of vanishingly small odds.

* * *

In 2013, Walter Udoeyop received a letter from an old friend back in Nigeria. Father Gerald Anietie Akata’s 70-year-old mother had a tumor in her heart, but no hospital in Nigeria could perform the surgery she needed. Akata enclosed his mother’s medical records, asking for Walter’s help.

Walter, a consultant at Johnson City Medical Center, in Tennessee, knew from the start this wasn’t going to be easy. Francisca Akata’s operation would cost a daunting $150,000 minimum if she had it in the United States. Father Akata had been a pastor in Johnson City for several years, and Walter initially hoped to enlist the help of the church and hospitals his friend had served in. But neither could raise such a large amount of money.

He recalled that another friend had recently had open-heart surgery in the United Arab Emirates for only $20,000. He phoned the hospital there, and the staff agreed to operate on Francisca. Father Akata’s parishioners in the U.S. and Nigeria raised the money, and three months later, Francisca Akata was flying eastward toward the UAE.

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But a few days after her admission, the doctors told Francisca that blood tests had revealed that she had a rare blood type, shared by 0.2 percent of the white population: Lutheran B-negative. To complicate the matter, she was also O-negative—the uncommon, but not officially rare, blood type that many of us have heard of, shared by about 5 percent of people. The combination made Francisca’s blood so rare that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to find a match for her.

Because there was no compatible blood in the UAE or any of the other Gulf States, Mrs. Akata had to fly back home and wait until matching blood was found. The hospital searched for blood but couldn’t find any in the two weeks that followed.

Walter requested Francisca’s blood tests from the hospital and then began the search for compatible blood in the U.S. He tried blood center after blood center across the country before he was referred to the American Rare Donor Program in Philadelphia, a database of all rare-blood donors in America. Finally, he had located some suitable donors.

His relief was short-lived because, as Thomas or Peyrard could have told him, it’s a lot harder for blood to cross borders than it is for people. “You would not imagine how difficult it is when you have to import or export rare blood,” Peyrard says. “Your patient is dying, and you have people in an office asking for this paper and that form. It’s just crazy. It’s not a TV set; it’s not a car. It’s blood.”

Sometimes sending blood from one country to another is more than a bureaucratic nightmare. As Walter now discovered, the hospital in the UAE had a policy not to accept blood donations from outside the Gulf States, which meant that Francisca wouldn’t be able to use the blood he had found in America.

The situation looked bleak. But then, after a chance meeting with a colleague, Father Akata found out about a small general hospital in Cameroon, Nigeria’s neighbor to the east, that had set up a heart-surgery program with funding from the Catholic Church. Walter got in touch with the surgeons there, who confirmed that they could do the surgery if he could supply compatible blood.

The American Rare Donor Program contacted the South African National Blood Service, which had four suitable donors listed; however, one of these was unreachable, one wasn’t able to donate until later in the year, and two had been medically retired from donating. These are all common problems with rare donors. There are limits placed on how often people can donate. What’s more, keeping track of donors can also be a challenge—some get ill or die, and others move home without updating the blood services.

There were two units of compatible blood in South Africa’s frozen rare-blood bank, but frozen blood has a 48-hour lifespan, compared with four weeks for fresh blood. If it got held up at customs, or delayed for any other reason, it would be unusable by the time it reached the hospital in Cameroon. To use the frozen South African blood, Francisca would have to have her operation in South Africa. Walter was running out of options.

* * *

When he turned 18, Thomas was encouraged to donate blood for himself. There is now no frozen-blood bank in Switzerland, so his blood is stored in the rare-blood banks in Paris and Amsterdam. He travels to France to donate, avoiding the bureaucratic machinery that would grind into action if his blood had to be sent over the Swiss border to Paris.

The first urgent request came a few years after Thomas began donating, when he got a phone call asking if he would mind taking, and paying for, a taxi to the blood center in Geneva to donate for a newborn baby. That moment brought it starkly home to him how valuable his blood was. It was perhaps also the first intimation that the costs of donating would ultimately be his. Some countries do pay donors (and some pay more for rare blood) to encourage donations. But the majority of national blood services don’t pay, to deter donors with infections such as HIV.

The altruistic ethos of the blood services in Western Europe means that they also don’t cover donors’ travel costs or time off work, both of which would constitute payment for blood. They can’t even send a taxi to take a rare donor to a blood center, although the blood itself can travel by taxi from the center to a patient.

It’s something that can become a frustrating and potentially fatal problem. Peyrard told me that he was recently contacted by a doctor in Zurich asking for blood with another rare combination of negatives, for a patient about to undergo surgery. There were only four compatible donors in France, and Peyrard could contact only two by phone. One was a 64-year-old lady living in a village near Toulouse. Although she was more than willing to go to the blood center in the city and donate, because she can’t drive, she simply couldn’t get there.

So unless his doctor drives him over the border again—a courtesy going far beyond the call of duty between a doctor and patient—Thomas will take a day’s holiday from work, twice a year, and travel to Annemasse in France to donate, paying his own travel costs there and back.

* * *

Walter had one last chance to find the blood Francisca Akata so desperately needed: a small laboratory on the other side of the Atlantic. The modest size of the International Blood Group Reference Laboratory in Filton, near Bristol in England, is misleading; the expertise at the IBGRL means it’s one of the world’s leading laboratories in rare-blood identification. It also maintains the world’s database of rare-blood donors, the International Rare Donor Panel. The panel exists to ensure that if anyone, anywhere in the world, ever needs rare blood, they will have the best possible chance of getting it.

If the donor and the recipient are in different countries, the blood services of both countries will negotiate costs. The requesting country usually covers the cost of flying the blood in at 4 degrees Celsius, the temperature at which fresh red blood cells have to be preserved to keep them intact before transfusion.

“It’s generally a reciprocal agreement between countries so that no one who ever needs blood is penalized for being where they are,” Nicole Thornton, the head of Red Cell Reference at the IBGRL, told me. “Some countries charge a bit more per unit of blood, but there’s no hard-and-fast rule. Most don’t charge too much because they might be in the same situation at some point.” In the U.K., the charge is £125.23 per bag of blood.

Walter contacted Thornton, who searched the International Rare Donor Panel and identified 550 active O-negative/Lutheran B-negative donors worldwide. Because they are inherited, blood types tend to pool in specific populations, and 400 of those donors turned out to be in the U.K.—most of them in or around London. A flight from the U.K. to Cameroon would be much shorter than a flight from the U.S. And the blood would be fresh.

As the blood was available, and because it wouldn’t make logistical sense to fly a second consignment if Francisca needed more than four units, the U.K. blood services agreed to send six bags of blood. All six U.K. donors who received a phone call and were able to donate did so within days.

In Rochester, England, it was James’s 104th donation. He first donated as an 18-year-old in the army in 1957, when he was told his O-negative blood was “good for blue babies.” In 1985, he got a letter explaining his blood was rare (although not how rare) and asking whether anyone in his family would donate so their blood could be tested. The family members he asked were reluctant, however, believing they “needed their blood for themselves.”

A few years later, in the early 1990s, James got his first phone call from the blood services, asking whether he would mind “popping down to the local hospital to donate blood for someone in Holland.” There, he was told that a taxi was waiting for his blood. He didn’t think this particularly unusual, saying that it was all in a day’s donation.

He wasn’t surprised to be called up again, but he didn’t know that his blood was going to Cameroon. And previously, he hadn’t known he was Lutheran B-negative, as well as O-negative. He was surprised and mildly intrigued to learn that there were only 550 known people with the same blood in the world.

The bag of James’s blood joined the five bags from the other donors, and all six were couriered to Tooting in south London to start their 4,000-mile journey.

This was when Walter discovered how remote the hospital really was. Kumbo, in the mountains of northwest Cameroon, is more than 250 miles north of both Douala and Yaoundé, the sites of the country’s major international airports. The blood would have to travel for several hours to get there, bumping over a dirt road in the March heat. Even packed in ice, it would be hard to keep it at the cell-preserving 4 degrees Celsius.

Francisca Akata’s blood landed at the international airport in Douala and was cleared through customs by noon on Friday, March 21, 2014. A helicopter, supplied at the last minute by the hospital to avoid the lengthy road journey, was waiting outside. Her blood flew the rest of the way to Kumbo and arrived at 2 p.m., just after Francisca had been wheeled into the operating room.

The operation was a success, and the Catholic Diocese of Kumbo found her somewhere to recuperate before flying home. Walter still marvels at the efforts of so many people—on three separate continents—to save one life, “just like the shepherd who left 99 sheep and went after the one that was lost.”

* * *

Because his blood can be given to anyone with a negative Rh blood type, Thomas could save countless lives. But if he ever needs blood himself, he can receive only Rhnull blood. If he donates a unit for himself, he has to permit it to be used by anyone else who might need it.

This leaves Thomas dependent on other Rhnull donors. But of the other 40-odd people known worldwide with Rhnull blood, only six or so besides Thomas are thought to donate. And they’re all a long way away: Their locations include Brazil, Japan, China, the U.S., and Ireland. The reluctance to donate is perhaps understandable, but it places an added burden on the people who do give their blood. It’s also probably why Thomas, when Peyrard and I met him in Lausanne, greeted us with mild amusem*nt. “Is it interesting to put a face to the bag of blood?”

Over tea, he described the impact of his blood on his life. As a child, he couldn’t go to summer camp because his parents feared he might have an accident. As an adult, he takes reasonable precautions: He drives carefully and doesn’t travel to countries without modern hospitals. He keeps a card from the French National Immunohematology Reference Laboratory in Paris, confirming his Rhnull blood type, in his wallet in case he is ever hospitalized. But one thing that is in his blood—and that of almost everyone growing up in the shadow of the Alps—is skiing. Abstaining seems to have been an option he never even considered.

The only apparent health effect he experiences is mild anemia, which is why he was advised to donate twice a year instead of four times. Intriguingly, one doctor once asked whether he has a quick temper. In fact, the opposite is the case: “I am very calm. If it’s just my personality or if my blood has an impact or not, I don’t know.”

On the whole, Thomas is laid-back about his “condition.” “I don’t have a problem like hemophilia that has an impact on daily life. In that sense, I’m lucky. I’m glad also that when I was told I had this special blood, they told me it’s okay to have children. I was allowed to have a family, so I’m happy.”

Donors such as James and Thomas never learn what has happened to their blood—and hematologists don’t fly across borders to express their appreciation. But on this day, as we sat in a room full of spring sunlight looking out at the hazy white-flecked peaks, Peyrard told Thomas that his blood had saved lives. Just recently, a unit was sent back from France to Switzerland for a young child who would otherwise have died.

On one level, Thomas’s blood does divide him from the rest of us. On another, as the French philosopher Simone Weil observed, every separation is a link.

And Thomas’s different blood has given him the odd unexpected perk. When he was due for conscription, the doctor who first told him about his blood—Marie-José Stelling—wrote to the army saying it was too dangerous for him to do military service, so he was exempted. Over the course of the past 40-odd years, Thomas and Stelling have developed a particularly close relationship. Last year, she joined him and his family and friends to celebrate his 50th birthday party on a boat on Lake Geneva. “She was very kind,” Thomas says. “She saw the human aspect of being Rhnull—not just a bag of blood.”

This article appears courtesy of Mosaic.

The Most Precious Blood on Earth (2024)

FAQs

The Most Precious Blood on Earth? ›

An Rh null person has to rely on the cooperation of a small network of regular Rh null donors around the world if they need the blood. Across the globe, there are only nine active donors for this blood group. This makes it the world's most precious blood type, hence the name "golden" blood.

Who has the rarest blood in the world? ›

The rarest blood type is Rhnull. Unlike other blood types, people with Rhnull blood have no Rh antigens on their red blood cells. Researchers estimate that just 1 in 6 million people have Rhnull blood.

What is golden blood? ›

A general definition of a rare blood type is one that happens at a rate of 1 per 1,000 people or fewer. One of the world's rarest blood types is Rh-null. Fewer than 50 people in the world have this blood type. It's so rare that it's sometimes called “golden blood.”

What are the three rarest blood types? ›

What are the 3 rarest blood types?
  • the AB- (AB negative) blood type, which is seen in just 0.6 percent of people followed by.
  • B- (found in 1.5 percent of the United States population) and.
  • AB+ (present in just 3.4 percent of people in the United States).

Why is it called Lutheran B negative blood? ›

The name Lutheran stems from a blood donor's misspelled last name, reportedly named Lutteran or Luteran. All of these antigens arise from variations in a gene called BCAM (basal cell adhesion molecule). The system is based on the expression of two codominant alleles, designated Lua and Lub.

Is O+ a blood type? ›

In addition to the A and B antigens, there is a protein called the Rh factor, which can be either present (+) or absent (–), creating the 8 most common blood types (A+, A-, B+, B-, O+, O-, AB+, AB-).

Is O+ blood rare? ›

There are eight main blood types but some are rarer than others. The list below shows the percentage of donors with each blood type: O positive: 35% O negative: 13%

What blood type do mosquitoes like? ›

Type O blood seems to be a mosquitoes' preferred blood type as compared to A, B and AB, but the only significant difference was when it was compared to Type A,” says Ulysses Wu, MD, Hartford HealthCare's chief epidemiologist and medical director of infectious disease.

What blood type rejects pregnancy? ›

If the mother is Rh-negative, her immune system treats Rh-positive fetal cells as if they were a foreign substance. The mother's body makes antibodies against the fetal blood cells. These antibodies may cross back through the placenta into the developing baby. They destroy the baby's circulating red blood cells.

What is the oldest blood type? ›

There is evidence that the different blood types have evolved over millions of years, with type A being the most ancient. The difference between the various blood types comes down to sugars that cover the surface of red blood cells.

What blood type are most Irish? ›

Blood group O Positive is the most common group in Ireland while AB negative is the least common.

What blood type is most needed? ›

Overall, the most in-demand blood type is O, both positive and negative. But type AB, for example, is the most in-demand blood type for plasma donations. Platelet donations are constantly in demand because of their short shelf life, and A-positive and B-positive are the blood types most needed to donate platelets.

Can your blood type change? ›

Usually, your blood type doesn't change throughout your life. But there are some rare cases where it can happen. Potential causes are bone marrow transplants or certain types of infections or leukemia. It's important to note that not all these changes in blood type are permanent.

What is the code 96 blood? ›

Code 96 donations lack a particular combination of common markers, while Code 99 donations lack a marker nearly all other people have. Donors who self-identify their ethnicity make classification of rare units even more precise.

What ethnicity is B positive blood? ›

B positive is an important blood type for treating people with sickle cell disorder and thalassaemia who need regular transfusions. These conditions affect South Asian and Black communities where B positive blood is more common.

What does your blood type say about you? ›

From what we currently know, your blood type does tell a story about your family history and ethnic background. As far as determining your personality, though, the evidence is just not there.

Who has golden blood? ›

One of the world's rarest blood types is Rh- null. It is called the "golden blood". This blood type is distinct from Rh-negative since it has none of the Rh antigens at all. There are less than 50 people in the world population who have this blood type.

What blood is super rare? ›

The rarest blood type in existence is Rhnull blood. This stuff is characterized by a complete lack of antigens in the Rh system, which is the largest blood group system. This includes the D antigen (Rh factor, baby), plus the other 50-something antigens in the group.

Why is golden blood so rare? ›

The golden blood type or Rh null blood group contains no Rh antigens (proteins) in the red blood cells (RBCs). This is the rarest blood group in the world, with less than 50 individuals having this blood group. It was first seen in Aboriginal Australians.

Which blood is too rare? ›

AB negative is the rarest of the eight main blood types - just 1% of our donors have it. Despite being rare, demand for AB negative blood is low and we don't struggle to find donors with AB negative blood. However, some blood types are both rare and in demand.

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