Abstract

Macrophage migration inhibitory factor is a key pro-inflammatory mediator. A 5-CATT repeat functional polymorphism within the promoter of the gene was previously associated with the lowest promoter activity. It was hypothesised that patients exhibiting a 5-CATT allele would have a less aggressive inflammatory response with an associated less severe clinical phenotype in sarcoidosis. Irish Caucasian sarcoidosis patients (n = 173) followed up for 1-39 yrs and a control group (n = 166) were genotyped for the CATT repeat polymorphism. Disease severity at the time of diagnosis and at the time of elaboration of the present study was assessed by the presence of thoracic and extrathoracic symptoms, erythema nodosum, radiographic interstitial changes (chest radiograph score equal to stage II or greater, or high-resolution computed tomography confirmed), pulmonary function tests, steroid use, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein and angiotensin-converting enzyme levels. In the Irish population studied, no evidence was found of a significant association between either sarcoidosis susceptibility and disease severity and the 5-CATT repeat functional polymorphism in the macrophage migration inhibitory gene. The present study found no significant association between the 5-CATT repeat macrophage migration inhibitory factor gene polymorphism and sarcoidosis, and did not support the overriding role for macrophage migration inhibitory factor in driving sarcoidosis pathogenesis.

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