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References

  1. Polin H et al. Effective molecular RHD typing strategy for blood donations. Transfusion, 2007. [Citation] [RHeference]
  2. Polin H et al. Identification of RHD alleles with the potential of anti-D immunization among seemingly D- blood donors in Upper Austria. Transfusion, 2009. [Citation] [RHeference]
  3. Flegel WA et al. D variants at the RhD vestibule in the weak D type 4 and Eurasian D clusters. Transfusion, 2009. [Citation] [RHeference]
  4. Stabentheiner S et al. Overcoming methodical limits of standard RHD genotyping by next-generation sequencing. Vox Sang, 2011. [Citation] [RHeference]
  5. Polin H et al. On the trail of anti-CDE to unexpected highlights of the RHD*weak 4.3 allele in the Upper Austrian population. Vox Sang, 2012. [Citation] [RHeference]
  6. Orzińska A et al. RHD variants in Polish blood donors routinely typed as D-. Transfusion, 2013. [Citation] [RHeference]
  7. Srivastava K et al. The DAU cluster: a comparative analysis of 18 RHD alleles, some forming partial D antigens. Transfusion, 2016. [Citation] [RHeference]
  8. Polin H et al. RHD Tyr311Stop encoded by a novel nonsense mutation. Transfusion, 2016. [Citation] [RHeference]
  9. Polin H et al. Identification of four novel RHD alleles by weakened antigen D expression. Transfusion, 2018. [Citation] [RHeference]
  10. Matzhold EM et al. RHD del28Phe (DMW) encoded by a novel in-frame deletion resulting in reduced D antigen expression. Transfusion, 2019. [Citation] [RHeference]