Abstract
IntroductionWhether Th1-related cytokine polymorphisms influence the risk of atopic dermatitis (AD) remain inconclusive.AimThe authors performed a meta-analysis to robustly explore relationships between Th1-related cytokine polymorphisms and the risk of AD by merging the results of eligible publications.Material and methodsThe authors strictly adhere to the PRISMA guidelines in study design and implementation. A thorough literature search in Medline, Embase, Wanfang, VIP and CNKI was performed by the authors to identify eligible publications. Relationships between TNF-α/IL-1/IL-6/IL-18 polymorphisms and the risk of AD were estimated with odds ratio and its 95% confidence interval. The statistically significant p value was set at 0.05. The quality of eligible publications was assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS).ResultsIn total twenty-one publications with a NOS score of 7-8 were selected for merged quantitative analyses. We have noticed that genotypic frequencies of IL-1B +3954 C/T and IL-18 -137G/C polymorphisms among cases with AD and population-based controls differed significantly. Moreover, we have found that genotypic frequency of IL-1B +3954 C/T polymorphism among cases with AD and population-based controls of Caucasian origin differed significantly, and genotypic frequency of IL-18 -137G/C polymorphism among cases with AD and population-based controls of both Caucasian and Asian origins also differed significantly. However, we did not observe such genotypic distribution differences for TNF-α -238 G/A, TNF-α -308 G/A, IL-1A -889 C/T, IL-1B −511 C/T and IL6 -174 G/C polymorphisms.ConclusionsThe present meta-analysis shows that IL-1B +3954 C/T and IL-18 -137G/C polymorphisms may affect the risk of AD.
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