Association of vitamin D receptor polymorphisms and type 1 diabetes susceptibility in children: a meta-analysis

Author:

Sahin Ozlem Atan1,Goksen Damla2,Ozpinar Aysel3,Serdar Muhittin3,Onay Huseyin4

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of PediatricsAcıbadem University School of Medicine, Atasehir, Istanbul, Turkey

2. 2Department of Pediatric EndocrinologyFaculty of Medicine, Ege University, Bornova, Izmir, Turkey

3. 3Department of BiochemistryAcıbadem University, School of Medicine, Atasehir, Istanbul, Turkey

4. 4Department of Medical GeneticsFaculty of Medicine, Ege University, Bornova, Izmir, Turkey

Abstract

Background There have been studies focused on FokI, BsmI, ApaI and TaqI polymorphisms of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene and susceptibility to type 1 diabetes mellitus with controversial results. Methods This present study is a meta-analysis investigating the association between FokI, ApaI, TaqI and BsmI polymorphisms of VDR gene and type 1 DM in children. A literature search was performed using Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane and PubMed. Any study was considered eligible for inclusion if at least one of FokI, ApaI, TaqI and BsmI polymorphisms was determined, and outcome was type 1 DM at pediatric age. Results A total of 9 studies comprising 1053 patients and 1017 controls met the study inclusion criteria. The pooled odds ratios (ORs) of the FokI, ApaI, TaqI and BsmI polymorphisms were combined and calculated. Forest plots and funnel plots of the OR value distributions were drawn. Our meta-analysis has demonstrated statistically significant associations between DM1 and VDR genotypes, BsmIBB (P < 0.05), BsmIBb, (P < 0.05), BsmIbb (P < 0.05), TaqITT (P < 0.05) and TaqItt (P < 0.05) in children. Conclusion The results indicated that BsmIBB, BsmIBb and TaqItt polymorphisms were associated with an increased risk of type 1 DM, whereas BsmIbb and TaqITT had protective effect for type 1 DM in children.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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