Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a syndrome that frequently affects the critically ill. Recently, an increased number of dinucleotide repeats in the HMOX1 gene were reported to associate with development of AKI in cardiac surgery. We aimed to test the replicability of this finding in a Finnish cohort of critically ill septic patients. This multicenter study was part of the national FINNAKI study. We genotyped 300 patients with severe AKI (KDIGO 2 or 3) and 353 controls without AKI (KDIGO 0) for the guanine–thymine (GTn) repeat in the promoter region of the HMOX1 gene. The allele calling was based on the number of repeats, the cut off being 27 repeats in the S–L (short to long) classification, and 27 and 34 repeats for the S–M–L2 (short to medium to very long) classification. The plasma concentrations of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) enzyme were measured on admission. The allele distribution in our patients was similar to that published previously, with peaks at 23 and 30 repeats. The S-allele increases AKI risk. An adjusted OR was 1.30 for each S-allele in an additive genetic model (95% CI 1.01–1.66; p = 0.041). Alleles with a repeat number greater than 34 were significantly associated with lower HO-1 concentration (p<0.001). In septic patients, we report an association between a short repeat in HMOX1 and AKI risk.

Highlights

  • Disturbances in iron metabolism are associated with inflammation and oxidative stress and have been suggested to participate in the pathogenesis of Acute kidney injury (AKI) [2,3,4]

  • We aimed to investigate whether the previously reported association between heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1) repeat polymorphism and AKI development [5] can be seen in our study population of critically ill septic patients

  • 653 patients with sepsis were successfully genotyped for HMOX1-promoter polymorphism

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to test the replicability of this finding in a Finnish cohort of critically ill septic patients. We aimed to investigate whether the previously reported association between HMOX1 repeat polymorphism and AKI development [5] can be seen in our study population of critically ill septic patients

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Results
Conclusion
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