Kolar Woman Has World's Rarest Blood: What Does CRIB Group Mean? Can They Donate Or Receive Blood?

When a 38-year-old woman from Karnataka's Kolar district was admitted for cardiac surgery, doctors expected a routine blood transfusion. Her blood type was O Rh-positive-the most common and widely compatible blood group in the world. But what followed shocked India's top immunohematologists and stunned global researchers. None of the available O+ units were compatible with her. Not even blood from her own family matched.

What doctors eventually uncovered was history-making: the woman had a never-before-seen blood group. After months of testing and international collaboration, her blood was confirmed to carry a brand-new antigen-completely unique to her. Named CRIB, this newly discovered blood group is now recognised globally and could change how rare blood groups are identified and managed worldwide.

Kolar Woman Has World s Rarest Blood What Does CRIB Group Mean Can They Donate Or Receive Blood

But what does this discovery really mean for India's healthcare system, the science of transfusion, and ordinary people who might carry similarly rare blood types without even knowing?

What Is The CRIB Blood Group?

CRIB is an entirely new blood group antigen classified under the Cromer (CR) blood group system. Its name-CRIB-pays tribute to both its scientific and geographic roots: CR for Cromer and IB for India and Bangalore, where it was first discovered.

The woman's blood was found to be panreactive, meaning it reacted with every blood sample it was tested against. This incompatibility made transfusion impossible, pushing her doctors to escalate the case to the Advanced Immunohematology Reference Laboratory at the Rotary Bangalore TTK Blood Centre.

After months of research and sample testing-including from 20 of her family members-it became clear: this wasn't just a rare type; it was something completely new.

Why CRIB Blood Is So Important (And Complicated)

While the woman's blood type is technically O Rh+, the presence of the CRIB antigen makes it incompatible with standard O-positive blood. In practical terms, this means:

  • This person cannot receive blood from anyone with common O Rh+ blood.
  • Any future medical procedure that requires a transfusion will pose an extreme risk.
  • Only blood from someone else with the CRIB antigen-if such a person exists-will be compatible.
  • This makes donor identification and registry tracking critical.

How Was The CRIB Discovery Made?

Dr. Ankit Mathur and his team at the Rotary Bangalore TTK Blood Centre took the lead. When traditional testing methods failed, they used advanced serological techniques and collaborated with the International Blood Group Reference Laboratory (IBGRL) in Bristol, UK.

The entire research spanned ten months, involving molecular testing, family sample screening, and international peer validation. Finally, in June 2025, the discovery of the CRIB antigen was officially presented at the 35th Regional Congress of the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT) in Milan.

Kolar Woman Has World s Rarest Blood What Does CRIB Group Mean Can They Donate Or Receive Blood

Can People With CRIB Donate Or Receive Blood?

For now, the woman with CRIB blood can only donate blood to herself or someone with the exact same CRIB antigen. As of now, no other such individual has been found. She cannot receive blood from anyone else-not even close relatives with matching ABO and Rh groups.

To safeguard future cases and ensure lifesaving transfusions, the Rotary Bangalore TTK Blood Centre has now launched a Rare Donor Registry, in collaboration with the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the Karnataka State Blood Transfusion services.

What This Means For India (And The World)

India's contribution to global hematology just got monumental. This is not the first time Indian labs have helped in rare blood discovery. The TTK Blood Centre has previously identified other rare types like Rh null, Inb negative, and D- -, with many of these findings now internationally recognised.

For citizens, this serves as a wake-up call to get blood typed, donate regularly, and support rare donor registries. You may not know it-but your blood could be life-saving for someone with a rare group.

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