“…Approximately 1 in 300 persons (0.3%) has low or undetectable TPMT enzyme activity, whereas about 11% are heterozygous for TPMT gene mutations resulting in intermediate TPMT activity (Weinshilboum, 2001). There are currently 31 known alleles responsible for TPMT deficiency (TPMT*2, *3A, *3B, *3C, *3D, *4, *5, *6, *7, *8, *9, *10, *11, *12, *13, *14, *15, *16, *17, *18, *19, *20, *21, *22, *23, *24, *25, *26, *27, *28, and *29) and 3 alleles associated with normal TPMT activity (TPMT*1 and two silent polymorphisms) (Derijks and Wong, 2010;Lee et al, 2012). The TPMT*2 (c.238G > C), *3A (c.460G > A, c.719A > G), and *3C (c.719A > G) alleles account for 80% to 95% of inherited TPMT deficiency in different populations all over the world (Yates et al, 1997).…”