Published in:
01-01-2014 | Original Article
Prevalence of TPMT polymorphism in Indian patients requiring immunomodulator therapy and its clinical significance
Authors:
Sandeep Kirit Davavala, Devendra C. Desai, Philip Abraham, Tester Ashavaid, Anand Joshi, Tarun Gupta
Published in:
Indian Journal of Gastroenterology
|
Issue 1/2014
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Abstract
Background
Thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) enzyme plays a key role in the metabolism of azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine (6-MP). Mutations in the enzyme lead to generation of excess thioguanine, which causes suppression of various cell lineages, especially neutrophils. Data on the prevalence of TPMT polymorphism are available from Western and some Asian countries; such data from India are sparse.
Aims
The aim of this research is to study the prevalence of TPMT mutation in Indian patients requiring immunomodulator therapy and its relation to the development of neutropenia on azathioprine therapy.
Methods
In this retrospective study, data of all patients who underwent TPMT genotyping by PCR-RFLP and allele-specific PCR prior to immunomodulator therapy were analyzed. The frequency of on-treatment development of neutropenia (total neutrophil count <1,500 per cubic millimeters) was noted.
Results
Data were available on 126 patients (mean age, 42 [SD 13.6] years; 73 men and 53 women). The disease indications included ulcerative colitis (61), Crohn's disease (43), indeterminate colitis (1), autoimmune hepatitis (16), and others (5). TPMT genotype was wild in 120 patients (95.23 %) and heterozygous in 6 patients (4.77 %); no patient had homozygous mutation. Seven of 87 patients (6.8 %) who received azathioprine developed neutropenia; blood counts normalized on cessation of the drug in all. The incidence of neutropenia in patients with wild type was 6/84 (7.14 %) and with heterozygous type 1/3 (33 %) (p = 0.5764).
Conclusion
Nearly 5 % of this population of patients requiring immunomodulator therapy was heterozygous carriers of the TPMT gene. Neutropenia was equally common in patients without and with the mutation.