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Aim A ‘Silver Standard’ for HLA data collection and reporting has been described at ImmPort (immport.niaid.nih.gov, “Proposal for HLA Data Validation”) to address ambiguity resolution in the recording and reporting of HLA typing results. While standards are critical for HLA data interoperability, th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human immunology 2012, Vol.73, p.8-8
Hauptverfasser: Milius, Bob, Schneider, Joel, Heuer, Michael, Bashyal, Pradeep, George, Mike, Schneyman, Doug, Pollack, Jane, Madbouly, Abeer, Gragert, Loren, Hollenbach, Jill, Mack, Steven J, Bakker, Jack, Bochtler, Werner, Robinson, James, Müller, Carlheinz, Marsh, Steven G.E, Maiers, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aim A ‘Silver Standard’ for HLA data collection and reporting has been described at ImmPort (immport.niaid.nih.gov, “Proposal for HLA Data Validation”) to address ambiguity resolution in the recording and reporting of HLA typing results. While standards are critical for HLA data interoperability, they are not meaningful until useful tools are developed and made available for community use. We are developing distributable tools that implement this silver standard. Here we describe the development a web service to create, update, and retrieve HLA typing data in standardized formats without the need for NMDP allele codes and the corresponding inherent introduction of new ambiguities. Methods ReST web services with HTTP negotiation are being developed employing a Java library that manages HLA typing data using standardized formats. These formats include the XML based Histoimmunogenetics Markup Language (HML) and a simple character-delimited string format (GL String) able to encode ambiguity within HLA typing. Resources are identified with a simple Uniform Resource Identifier (URI). Results The services build on a foundation of an open access database schema for IMGT/HLA reference sequence data (updated quarterly), and objects such as alleles, lists of alleles, haplotypes, genotypes, lists of genotypes and multi-locus unphased genotypes. Public services include creating, updating, and retrieving these objects. Content negotiation allows data retrieval in a variety of formats including GL String, HML, HTML, JSON, and QR Code. Conclusions The tools being developed here provide the HLA researcher, clinician and lab technician a common resource for managing HLA data in a standardized way. We envision these tools to augment workflows through creating new instances of HLA typing objects when needed, and retrieval of those objects and their associated metadata when called upon.
ISSN:0198-8859
DOI:10.1016/j.humimm.2012.07.020