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  • HLA-A*3101, in Caucasian patients linked to increased risk of developing reaction to Carbamazepine

HLA-A*3101, in Caucasian patients linked to increased risk of developing reaction to Carbamazepine

ICNA
Updated

Carbamazepine causes various forms of hypersensitivity reactions, ranging from maculopapular exanthema to severe blistering reactionsResearchers have now identified a gene, called HLA-A*3101, in Caucasian patients that increases the risk of developing a reaction to the drug from 5% to 26%. 

The research undertaken, in collaboration with the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, screened more than a million variants in DNA across the human genome to understand why some patients are more prone to the drug's side-effects than others. Research in Taiwan has already shown that carbamazepine-induced Steven Johnson Syndrome–Toxic Epidermal Necropysis is strongly associated with the HLA-B*1502 allele gene in the  south east asian population , but Liverpool scientists discovered that this gene could not be used to predict the reaction in Caucasian people.


Dr Ana Alfirevic, from the University's Wolfson Centre for Personalised Medicine, said: "This is a significant finding that highlights the importance and advancement of new genetic technologies. We aim to support the development of medicines based on a patient's unique genetic make-up to allow clinicians to prescribe the most effective and safe treatments." 

Citation

McCormack M, Alfirevic A, Bourgeois S, Farrell JJ, Kasperavičiūtė D, Carrington M, et al. HLA-A*3101 and carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity reactions in Europeans. The New England journal of medicine. 2011 Mar ;364(12):1134-43. [pubmed]

 



 

 

 

 


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