Factor V Leiden and Thermolabile Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase Gene Variants in an East Anglian Preeclampsia Cohort

Author:

O’Shaughnessy Kevin M.1,Fu Beiyuan1,Ferraro Franco1,Lewis Ian1,Downing Sarah1,Morris Nick H.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Clinical Pharmacology Unit, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge Clinical School, Cambridge, UK (K.M.O., B.F., F.F., I.L., S.D.); and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital and Central Middlesex Hospital Trust, London, UK (N.H.M.).

Abstract

Abstract —Preeclampsia is a heritable condition that develops as a result of widespread vascular endothelial dysfunction. The thrombotic tendency in this condition has suggested a number of candidate genes, and there have been recent reports of positive association with the Leiden variant of factor V and the thermolabile variant of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase. We attempted to reproduce these results in a large cohort of well-characterized women with preeclampsia, recruited prospectively within the East Anglian region of the United Kingdom. Women in the preeclampsia cohort (n=283) were genotyped for both the Leiden variant (G1691A) of factor V and the thermolabile variant (C677T) of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase. Genotype and allele frequencies were compared with those of 2 control groups, one consisting of women recruited prospectively (n=100) from the same maternity hospital as the subjects and another consisting of normotensive women (n=100) from East Anglia. No significant differences were detected. Specifically, the carrier rate for the Leiden variant was 5.3% in the preeclampsia group and 5.5% in the combined control group. T677 homozygotes for methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase were 11% and 11.5% in the 2 groups, respectively. We conclude that there is no evidence of association of preeclampsia with either of these 2 polymorphisms in our study population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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