Background and objective
Warfarin is a commonly used oral anticoagulant with a narrow therapeutic index and various genetic and clinical factors that influence interpatient variability in dose requirements. This study investigated the impact of genetic and nongenetic factors on warfarin dose requirements in Egyptians.
Methods
DNA was extracted from 207 patients taking warfarin for more than 2 months and genotyped for VKORC1 (3673 G> A), CYP2C9 *2*3*4*5*8, CYP4F2 (V33M; rs2108622), APOE (rs429358, rs7412), and CALU (rs339097) gene polymorphisms. Linear regression modeling was conducted to identify the genetic and nongenetic factors that independently influence warfarin dose requirements.
Results
VKORC1 3673 AA or GA genotype (P < 0.0001), one or two variant alleles of CYP2C9 gene (P= 0.0004), APOE ε2 haplotype (P = 0.01), and increasing age (P < 0.0001) were all associated with lower warfarin dose, whereas smoking (P = 0.025) and pulmonary embolism (P = 0.0059) showed association with higher warfarin doses. These factors explained 31% of the warfarin dose variability. This is the first independent confirmation of the association of the CALU rs339097 variant with higher warfarin dose requirement, although inclusion of this single nucleotide polymorphism in the multiple regression model failed to achieve significance (P = 0.066). CYP4F2 (V33M) polymorphism was not significant (P = 0.314), despite its high frequency in the studied population (42%).
Conclusion
The study shows that VKORC1, CYP2C9 polymorphisms, APOE ε2 variant, and several clinical/ demographic variables are important determinants of warfarin dose requirements in Egyptian patients. The percentage of variability explained by these factors is lower than in those of European ancestry, but similar to the variability explained in Asians and African ancestry.
Delivery room SLI is more effective than intermittent bag and mask inflation for improving short-term respiratory outcome in preterm infants, without significant adverse effects.
This study aimed to assess the prevalence, severity, and etiology of neutropenia in infants and children admitted to a children's hospital in Egypt. A total of 200 patients with neutropenia were recruited from April 1, 2010 to September 30, 2010. Patients with a known hematological or immunological disease were excluded. Patients were followed till recovery or an underlying cause was uncovered. Viral serological analysis was done for patients with moderate/severe neutropenia, including cytomegalovirus (CMV); Epstein-Barr virus (EBV); hepatitis A, B, and C viruses; and HIV. Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) tested by enzyme immunoassay and bone marrow aspirate were done for prolonged neutropenia. The results revealed that neutropenia was mild in 90 (45%), moderate in 56 (28%), and severe in 54 (27%). Clinical diagnosis at admission was bronchopneumonia (38%), pyrexia of undetermined etiology (17%), bronchiolitis (13%), urinary tract infection (9%), acute gastroenteritis (8%), hepatitis (6.5%), and septicemia (5%). Patients with mild neutropenia recovered within 1 week. Among 110 patients with moderate/severe neutropenia, 80 (73%) recovered in <3 weeks. Predictors of prolonged neutropenia were age younger than 18 months (P < .01), absolute neutrophils count (ANC) < 500/mm(3) (P < .05), hemoglobin < 10 gm/dL (P < .05), and positive CMV serology (P < .01). CMV and EBV serology were positive in 34.5% and 7.3% of patients, respectively. ANCA was positive in 42.8% of patients with prolonged severe neutropenia. In conclusion, neutropenia is a frequent finding in Egyptian infants and children, usually mild and transient, and mainly associated with infection. CMV and EBV are associated with prolonged neutropenia. Immune neutropenia is a common cause of moderate/severe neutropenia in the first two years of life.
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