Abstract

Background and Objective: Agranulocytosis is a rare and potentially life-threatening complication of metamizole (dipyrone) intake that is characterized by a loss of circulating neutrophil granulocytes. While the mechanism underlying this adverse drug reaction is not well understood, involvement of the immune system has been suggested. In addition, associations between genetic variants in the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) region and agranulocytosis induced by other drugs have been reported. The aim of the present study was to assess whether genetic variants in classical HLA genes are associated with the susceptibility to metamizole-induced agranulocytosis (MIA) in a European population by targeted resequencing of eight HLA genes.Design: A case-control cohort of Swiss patients with a history of neutropenia or agranulocytosis associated with metamizole exposure (n = 53), metamizole-tolerant (n = 39) and unexposed controls (n = 161) was recruited for this study. A high-throughput resequencing (HTS) and high-resolution typing method was used to sequence and analyze eight HLA loci in a discovery subset of this cohort (n = 31 cases, n = 38 controls). Identified candidate alleles were investigated in the full Swiss cohort as well as in two independent cohorts from Germany and Spain using HLA imputation from genome-wide SNP array data. In addition, variant calling based on HTS data was performed in the discovery subset for the class I genes HLA-A, -B, and -C using the HLA-specific mapper hla-mapper.Results: Eight candidate alleles (p < 0.05) were identified in the discovery subset, of which HLA-C∗04:01 was associated with MIA in the full Swiss cohort (p < 0.01) restricted to agranulocytosis (ANC < 0.5 × 109/L) cases. However, no candidate allele showed a consistent association in the Swiss, German and Spanish cohorts. Analysis of individual sequence variants in class I genes produced consistent results with HLA typing but did not reveal additional small nucleotide variants associated with MIA.Conclusion: Our results do not support an HLA-restricted T cell-mediated immune mechanism for MIA. However, we established an efficient high-resolution (three-field) eight-locus HTS HLA resequencing method to interrogate the HLA region and demonstrated the feasibility of its application to pharmacogenetic studies.

Highlights

  • Metamizole is a non-opioid pro-drug with analgesic and antipyretic properties that has been used in clinical practice since the early 1930s (Hinz et al, 2016)

  • As determined by the multi-dimensional scaling (MDS) analysis, the proportion of participants of European ancestry among the total number recruited for the metamizole-induced agranulocytosis (MIA)-CH cohort was 96.5%, of which 75.5, 74, and 74% in the case, tolerant control and unexposed control groups, respectively, reported “Swiss” as their ethnicity

  • We investigated the association between genetic variation in Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) genes and metamizole-induced agranulocytosis/neutropenia (MIA/MIN)

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Summary

Introduction

Metamizole (dipyrone) is a non-opioid pro-drug with analgesic and antipyretic properties that has been used in clinical practice since the early 1930s (Hinz et al, 2016). Previous studies have suggested that the mechanism of toxicity may involve an immunological component, including T-cell mediated elimination of neutrophils (Claas, 1996; Uetrecht, 1996; García-Martínez et al, 2003; Andres et al, 2009). Given their role in cell-mediated innate and adaptive immunity, an association of specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA alleles), as indicated by a small previous study (Vlahov et al, 1996), may provide evidence of such an immune-mediated mechanism. The aim of the present study was to assess whether genetic variants in classical HLA genes are associated with the susceptibility to metamizole-induced agranulocytosis (MIA) in a European population by targeted resequencing of eight HLA genes

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