HLA Alleles Influence the Clinical Signature of Amoxicillin-Clavulanate Hepatotoxicity
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Stephens, Camilla; López Nevot, Miguel Ángel; Ruiz-Cabello, Francisco; Ulzurrun, Eugenia; Soriano, Germán; Romero-Gómez, Manuel; Moreno-Casares, Anonia; Lucena, María Isabel; Andrade, Raúl J.Editorial
Public Library of Science (PLOS)
Materia
Alleles Amino acid analysis Arginine Bilirubin Damage mechanics Genotyping Phenotypes Spain
Date
2013Referencia bibliográfica
Stephens, C.; et al. HLA Alleles Influence the Clinical Signature of Amoxicillin-Clavulanate Hepatotoxicity. Plos One, 8(7): e68111 (2013). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/31146]
Patrocinador
This study was supported by the research grant Proyecto Excelencia P10-CTS-6470 and by the Agencia Española del Medicamento. CIBERehd and Red Genómica del Cancer are funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III.Résumé
[Background and Aim]
The genotype-phenotype interaction in drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is a subject of growing interest. Previous studies have linked amoxicillin-clavulanate (AC) hepatotoxicity susceptibility to specific HLA alleles. In this study we aimed to examine potential associations between HLA class I and II alleles and AC DILI with regards to phenotypic characteristics, severity and time to onset in Spanish AC hepatotoxicity cases.
[Methods]
High resolution genotyping of HLA loci A, B, C, DRB1 and DQB1 was performed in 75 AC DILI cases and 885 controls.
[Results]
The distributions of class I alleles A*3002 (P/Pc = 2.6E-6/5E-5, OR 6.7) and B*1801 (P/Pc = 0.008/0.22, OR 2.9) were more frequently found in hepatocellular injury cases compared to controls. In addition, the presence of the class II allele combination DRB1*1501-DQB1*0602 (P/Pc = 5.1E-4/0.014, OR 3.0) was significantly increased in cholestatic/mixed cases. The A*3002 and/or B*1801 carriers were found to be younger (54 vs 65 years, P = 0.019) and were more frequently hospitalized than the DRB1*1501-DQB1*0602 carriers. No additional alleles outside those associated with liver injury patterns were found to affect potential severity as measured by Hy’s Law criteria. The phenotype frequencies of B*1801 (P/Pc = 0.015/0.42, OR 5.2) and DRB1*0301-DQB1*0201 (P/Pc = 0.0026/0.07, OR 15) were increased in AC DILI cases with delayed onset compared to those corresponding to patients without delayed onset, while the opposite applied to DRB1*1302-DQB1*0604 (P/Pc = 0.005/0.13, OR 0.07).
[Conclusions]
HLA class I and II alleles influence the AC DILI signature with regards to phenotypic expression, latency presentation and severity in Spanish patients.