Author:
Kim Hyery,You Seungwon,Park Yoomi,Choi Jung Yoon,Ma Youngeun,Hong Kyung Tak,Koh Kyung-Nam,Yun Sunmin,Lee Kye Hwa,Shin Hee Young,Lee Suehyun,Yoo Keon Hee,Im Ho Joon,Kang Hyoung Jin,Kim Ju Han
Abstract
AbstractNUDT15 and TPMT variants are strong genetic determinants of thiopurine-induced hematological toxicity. Despite the impact of homozygous CRIM1 on thiopurine toxicity, several patients with wild-type NUDT15, TPMT, and CRIM1 experience thiopurine toxicity, therapeutic failure, and relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Novel pharmacogenetic interactions associated with thiopurine intolerance from hematological toxicities were investigated using whole-exome sequencing for last-cycle 6-mercaptopurine dose intensity percentages (DIP) tolerated by pediatric ALL patients (N = 320). IL6 rs13306435 carriers (N = 19) exhibited significantly lower DIP (48.0 ± 27.3%) than non-carriers (N = 209, 69.9 ± 29.0%; p = 0.0016 and 0.0028 by t test and multiple linear regression, respectively). Among 19 carriers, 7 with both heterozygous IL6 rs13306435 and CRIM1 rs3821169 showed significantly decreased DIP (24.7 ± 8.9%) than those with IL6 (N = 12, 61.6 ± 25.1%) or CRIM1 (N = 94, 68.1 ± 28.4%) variants. IL6 and CRIM1 variants showed marked inter-ethnic variability. Four-gene-interplay models revealed the best odds ratio (8.06) and potential population impact [relative risk (5.73), population attributable fraction (58%), number needed to treat (3.67), and number needed to genotype (12.50)]. Interplay between IL6 rs13306435 and CRIM1 rs3821169 was suggested as an independent and/or additive genetic determinant of thiopurine intolerance beyond NUDT15 and TPMT in pediatric ALL.
Funder
Ministry of Food and Drug Safety
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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