The aim of the present study was to investigate the association between polymorphism in the interleukin-10 gene promoter at position -1082 in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients who had presented allergic reaction due to efavirenz. The study included 63 patients treated at the Hospital São José de Doenças Infecciosas, Fortaleza, Ceará, Brazil. Twenty-one patients who had presented allergic reaction to efavirenz were compared to 42 patients with no allergic reaction following exposure to this drug. Blood samples were collected for DNA extraction and submitted to the restriction fragment length polymorphism - polymerase chain reaction technique. The -1082AA genotype was significantly more frequent in allergic patients as compared to non-allergic patients (p=0.019; χ(2)=5.534; OR=3.625; 95% CI=1.210-10.860). Likewise the allele IL-10 -1082A was identified significantly more often among efavirenz allergic patients than in the non-allergic group (p=0.009; χ(2)=6.787; OR=3.029; 95% CI=1.290-7.111). These findings suggest that the polymorphism in the interleukin-10 gene promoter -1082G/A can be related to the development of allergic reactions to efavirenz.
We evaluated interleukin-10 (IL10) -592 C/A, IL4-589 C/T, interferon gamma (IFNG)+874 A/T, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4)+49 A/G gene polymorphisms associated with efavirenz hypersensitivity reaction. A total of 63 human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients under treatment at a public hospital were included in the study, of whom 21 presented with efavirenz hypersensitivity. Patients who presented with efavirenz hypersensitivity reaction showed a higher frequency of the IL10 -592A allele than the controls (p=0.028). The allele A was associated with increased risk of efavirenz hypersensitivity (odds ratio=2.40). In case of IL4, a significant difference in the frequency of the IL4 -589 (C/T) polymorphism was not observed between patients and controls. A significant inverse correlation was observed when comparing the CTLA4+49A/G and IL4 -589 C/T polymorphisms (r=-0.650, p=0.001); that is, the CTLA4 +49GG genotype, involved with the lowest capacity of inhibition, was inversely correlated IL4-589TT genotype, which induces high production of IL-4. With respect to the CTLA4+49A/G and IFNG+874T/A gene polymorphisms, significant differences in allele and genotype frequencies were not observed between the groups. Therefore, our data suggest that polymorphisms in regulatory regions of cytokine genes could modulate an individual's susceptibility to efavirenz hypersensitivity reaction.
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