PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Regional HLA differences in Poland and their effect on stem cell donor registry planning.

  • Alexander H Schmidt,
  • Ute V Solloch,
  • Julia Pingel,
  • Jürgen Sauter,
  • Irina Böhme,
  • Nezih Cereb,
  • Kinga Dubicka,
  • Stephan Schumacher,
  • Jacek Wachowiak,
  • Gerhard Ehninger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e73835

Abstract

Read online

Regional HLA frequency differences are of potential relevance for the optimization of stem cell donor recruitment. We analyzed a very large sample (n = 123,749) of registered Polish stem cell donors. Donor figures by 1-digit postal code regions ranged from n = 5,243 (region 9) to n = 19,661 (region 8). Simulations based on region-specific haplotype frequencies showed that donor recruitment in regions 0, 2, 3 and 4 (mainly located in the south-eastern part of Poland) resulted in an above-average increase of matching probabilities for Polish patients. Regions 1, 7, 8, 9 (mainly located in the northern part of Poland) showed an opposite behavior. However, HLA frequency differences between regions were generally small. A strong indication for regionally focused donor recruitment efforts can, therefore, not be derived from our analyses. Results of haplotype frequency estimations showed sample size effects even for sizes between n≈5,000 and n≈20,000. This observation deserves further attention as most published haplotype frequency estimations are based on much smaller samples.