Impact of allele-level HLA matching on outcomes after myeloablative single unit umbilical cord blood transplantation for hematologic malignancy

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Abstract

We studied the effect of allele-level matching at human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1 in 1568 single umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantations for hematologic malignancy. The primary end point was nonrelapse mortality (NRM). Only 7% of units were allele matched at HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1; 15% were mismatched at 1, 26% at 2, 30% at 3, 16% at 4, and 5% at 5 alleles. In a subset, allele-level HLA match was assigned using imputation; concordance between HLA-match assignment and outcome correlation was confirmed between the actual and imputed HLA-match groups. Compared with HLA-matched units, neutrophil recovery was lower with mismatches at 3, 4, or 5, but not 1 or 2 alleles.NRM was higher with units mismatched at 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 alleles compared with HLAmatched units. The observed effects are independent of cell dose and patient age. These data support allele-levelHLAmatching in the selection of single UCB units. (Blood. 2014;123(1):133-140). © 2011 by The American Society of Hematology; all rights reserved.

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Eapen, M., Klein, J. P., Ruggeri, A., Spellman, S., Lee, S. J., Anasetti, C., … Rocha, V. (2014). Impact of allele-level HLA matching on outcomes after myeloablative single unit umbilical cord blood transplantation for hematologic malignancy. Blood, 123(1), 133–140. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2013-05-506253

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