Literature DB >> 16029428

HLA class I null alleles and new alleles affect unrelated bone marrow donor searches.

D M Smith1, J E Baker, W B Gardner, G W Martens, E D Agura.   

Abstract

Unrecognized HLA null alleles or new alleles may affect the outcome of bone marrow transplants using unrelated donors. Some reports suggest that null alleles occur in the range of 0.003-0.07% (1, 2), which has led some transplant programs to stop performing serologic typing. We describe nine cases involving expression variants or new alleles. Three cases involved expression variants, including two null alleles and A*24020102L. One of the null alleles was a new variant of A*02. Seven cases involved new alleles. In five cases, there where discrepancies between HLA typing by serology and PCR-SSP. These included the three expression variants, one new B40 allele that typed serologically as B41 and one new B*07 allele that typed serologically as B42. Eight of these cases were found in the course of typing bone marrow transplant patients or potential unrelated donors since May of 2001 (total tested, 710 patients, 1914 donors). Thus, the incidence of null alleles was two in 2,624 (0.08%). Sequence-based typing (SBT) was performed on 676 of these samples. The decision to perform SBT was influenced by finding a serologic typing discrepancy in two cases. In one of those cases, SBT would probably have been performed at a later time, prior to final selection of a donor. Thus, the incidence of new alleles was between 4 and 6 of 676 (0.59-0.89%). We conclude that new HLA alleles and null alleles are uncommon but not extremely rare, and they continue to affect a significant number of unrelated donor searches.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16029428     DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-0039.2005.00444.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tissue Antigens        ISSN: 0001-2815


  3 in total

1.  High-resolution characterization of allelic and haplotypic HLA frequency distribution in a Spanish population using high-throughput next-generation sequencing.

Authors:  Gonzalo Montero-Martín; Kalyan C Mallempati; Sridevi Gangavarapu; Francisco Sánchez-Gordo; Maria J Herrero-Mata; Antonio Balas; Jose L Vicario; Florentino Sánchez-García; Maria F González-Escribano; Manuel Muro; Maria R Moya-Quiles; Rafael González-Fernández; Javier G Ocejo-Vinyals; Luis Marín; Lisa E Creary; Kazutoyo Osoegawa; Tamara Vayntrub; Jose L Caro-Oleas; Carlos Vilches; Dolores Planelles; Marcelo A Fernández-Viña
Journal:  Hum Immunol       Date:  2019-02-11       Impact factor: 2.850

2.  Resolution of ambiguous HLA genotyping in korean by multi-group-specific sequence-based typing.

Authors:  Yongjung Park; Cha Eun Yoon; Oh-Joong Kwon; Yu-Seun Kim; Hyon-Suk Kim
Journal:  Yonsei Med J       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 2.759

3.  Application of High-Throughput Next-Generation Sequencing for HLA Typing on Buccal Extracted DNA: Results from over 10,000 Donor Recruitment Samples.

Authors:  Yuxin Yin; James H Lan; David Nguyen; Nicole Valenzuela; Ping Takemura; Yung-Tsi Bolon; Brianna Springer; Katsuyuki Saito; Ying Zheng; Tim Hague; Agnes Pasztor; Gyorgy Horvath; Krisztina Rigo; Elaine F Reed; Qiuheng Zhang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-10-31       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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