Abstract
Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is one of the most common hematologic disorders with poorly predictable clinical course and outcome. We studied the distribution of interleukin 1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) gene polymorphism (intron-2) among children and adolescents with ITP and correlated IL-1Ra gene polymorphism to disease susceptibility, response to therapy, and outcome. Sixty children with ITP (mean age: 9.2±4.5y) and 100 healthy controls (mean age: 8.83±4.05y) were enrolled. The frequencies of the allele A2 and genotype A1A2 were significantly higher in patients compared with controls ( P <0.0001, P =0.0008, respectively). Allele A2 conferred 3.1 times increased relative risk for disease development. Allele A2 and genotypes A1A2 and A2A2 were significantly more frequent among remitted patients ( P =0.028 and 0.024, respectively). There was no significant difference between different genotypes and alleles regarding bleeding score ( P >0.05). Patients with polymorphic allele A2 (A1A2/A2A2) showed significantly better response to steroids than those with homozygous wild allele A1 ( P =0.028). IL-1Ra polymorphism might contribute to the susceptibility to ITP in Egyptian children. The presence of A2 polymorphic allele of IL-1Ra gene was found to be associated with better disease outcome and response to steroids than those with homozygous wild allele.
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