FigureĀ 2.
Time to transplant by patient ancestry and by donor type stratified by ancestry. (A) Compared with European ancestry patients, non-Europeans were more likely to have delayed times to transplant (ie, transplant indication to consult, consult to transplant, CR to transplant, and indication to transplant). (B) When analyzing time from transplant indication to allograft by donor type stratified by ancestry, HLA-identical sibling and CB transplants were the fastest regardless of ancestry, 8/8 URD transplants were markedly delayed in non-Europeans, and haploidentical and mmURD transplants were delayed in both groups. Box plots present time IQR (boxes), medians (solid horizontal lines), and range (bars). Maximum range outliers (17/313 patients) were excluded from this graphic. P values reflect differences in the likelihood of clinically significant delays to consult and transplant. Haplo, haploidentical.