articleNew England Journal of MedicineMar 23, 2011BRONZE OA

HLA-A*3101 and Carbamazepine-Induced Hypersensitivity Reactions in Europeans

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland · University of Liverpool · +21 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Carbamazepine causes various forms of hypersensitivity reactions, ranging from maculopapular exanthema to severe blistering reactions. The HLA-B*1502 allele has been shown to be strongly correlated with carbamazepine-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS-TEN) in the Han Chinese and other Asian populations but not in European populations.

Methods

We performed a genomewide association study of samples obtained from 22 subjects with carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity syndrome, 43 subjects with carbamazepine-induced maculopapular exanthema, and 3987 control subjects, all of European descent. We tested for an association between disease and HLA alleles through proxy single-nucleotide polymorphisms and imputation, confirming associations by high-resolution sequence-based HLA typing. We replicated the associations in samples from 145 subjects with carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity reactions.

Citation impact

912
total citations
FWCI
85.68
Percentile
100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

30

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Carbamazepine
  • Odds ratio
  • Medicine
  • Allele
  • Toxic epidermal necrolysis
  • Human leukocyte antigen
  • Immunology
  • Genotyping
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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