Table 1. Prevalence of Gray Zone Alleles in Population Studies.
Author | Defined Gray Zone | Age | Gender | No. of Patients | Location | Gray Zone Rate (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rousseau et al.56 | 35–54 | Not reported | Women | 10,624 | Canada | 0.4 |
Dawson et al.57 | 40–59 | Newborns | Men and women | 2,000 | Spain | 2.7 |
Zhong et al.58 | 41–54 | Not reported | Men | 56 | USA | 1.7 |
Spence et al.59 | 40–59 | (Pregnant women of advanced maternal age) | Women | 745 | USA | 2.2 |
Drasinover et al.52 | 50–55 | Not reported | Women | 10,587 | Israel | 0.5 |
Dombrowski et al.60 | 40–54 | Not reported | Men | 10,572 | Canada | 0.3 |
Penagarikano et al.22 | 41–54 | Not reported | Men | 158 | Spain | 3.2 |
Cronister et al.61 | 45–54 | Not reported | Women | 29,103 | USA | 0.7 |
Tzeng et al.62 | 45–54 | Newborns | Boys | 10,046 | Taiwan | 0.7 |
Metcalfe et al.63 | 45–54 | >18 years | Women | 338 | Australia | 0.7 |
Levesque et al.64 | 45–54 | Mother-newborn pairs | Women, boys, and girls | 24,449 | Canada | 1.2 |
Fernandez-Carvajal et al.14 | 45–54 | Newborns | Boys and girls | 5,267 | Spain | 3.8 |
Otsuka et al.65 | 40–50 | Not reported | Men and women | 946 | Japan | 0.6 |
Tassone et al.19 | 45–54 | Newborns | Boys and girls | 14,207 | USA | 1.2 |
Seltzer et al.66 | 45–54 | 67–68 years | Men and women | 6,747 | USA | 2.6 |