BackgroundDombrock blood group system genotyping has revealed various rearrangements of the
Dombrock gene and identified new variant alleles in Brazil (i.e., DO*A-SH, DO*A-WL
and DO*B-WL). Because of the high heterogeneity of the Brazilian population,
interregional differences are expected during the investigation of Dombrock
genotypes. ObjectiveThe present study aims to determine the frequencies of Dombrock genotypes in blood
donors from Minas Gerais and compare the frequencies of the HY and JO alleles to
those of another population in Brazil. MethodsThe frequencies of the DO alleles in Minas Gerais, a southeastern state of Brazil,
were determined from the genotyping of 270 blood donors. Genotyping involved
polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to
identify the 323G>T, 350C>T, 793A>G, and 898C>G mutations, which are
related to the HY, JO, DO*A/DO*B, and DO*A-WL/DO*B-WL alleles, respectively.
Moreover, the frequencies of rare HY and JO alleles were statistically compared
using the chi-square test with data from another Brazilian region. ResultsThe HY allele frequency in Minas Gerais (2.4%) was almost twice that of the JO
allele (1.5%). The frequency of the HY allele was significantly higher (p-value =
0.001) than that in another Brazilian population and includes a rare homozygous
donor with the Hy- phenotype. In addition, the DO*A-WL and DO*B-WL alleles, which
were first identified in Brazil, were found in the state of Minas Gerais. ConclusionsThe data confirm that the frequencies of DO alleles differ between regions in
Brazil. The population of Minas Gerais could be targeted in a screening strategy
to identify the Hy- phenotype in order to develop a rare blood bank.
It is unknown whether HTLV-1/2 prevalence has been stable or changing with time in Brazil. We present a 10-year (2007–2016) analysis of HTLV-1/2 infection in first-time blood donors from four blood banks in Brazil. The Brazilian blood centers participating in this multicenter Recipient Epidemiology and Donor Evaluation Study (REDS) are located in Recife in the Northeast and in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte located in the Southeast of the country. A previous REDS study using the same database from 2007 to 2009 showed that the prevalence per 100,000 donors was 222 in Recife, 83 in Belo Horizonte and 101 in São Paulo. From 2007 to 2016, HTLV-1/2 prevalence was calculated by year, blood center and birth cohort. Covariates included age, gender, schooling, self-reported skin color and type of donation. From 1,092,174 first-blood donations, in the general analysis, HTLV-1/2 infection predominated in females, donors over 50 years of age, black skin color and less educated. The average prevalence was 228 per 100,000 donors in Recife, 222 in Rio de Janeiro, 104 in Belo Horizonte and 103 in São Paulo. In the 10-year analysis, HTLV-1/2 prevalence was stable, but a trend was observed toward an increase in HTLV-1/2 infection among younger people (p < 0.001), males (p = 0.049), those with white skin color (p < 0.001), and higher education (p = 0.014). Therefore, this 10-year surveillance of the infection showed stable HTLV-1/2 prevalence overall but a trend toward increased prevalence among the younger and more educated donors despite Brazilian policies to control sexually transmitted infections being in place for more than 10 years.
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