Potential role of regulatory DNA variants in modifying the risk of severe cutaneous reactions induced by aromatic anti‐seizure medications

Abstract

Objective

Stevens–Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) are severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions. Antiseizure medications (ASMs) with aromatic ring structure, including carbamazepine, are among the most common culprits. Screening for human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allele HLAB*15:02 is recommended prior to initiating treatment with carbamazepine in Asians, but this allele has low positive predictive value.

Methods

We performed whole genome sequencing and analyzed 6 199 696 common variants among 113 aromatic ASM-induced SJS/TEN cases and 84 tolerant controls of Han Chinese ethnicity.

Results

In the primary analysis, nine variants reached genome-wide significance (p < 5e-08), one in the carbamazepine subanalysis (85 cases vs. 77 controls) and a further eight identified in HLAB*15:02-negative subanalysis (35 cases and 53 controls). Interaction analysis between each novel variant from the primary analysis found that five increased risk irrespective of HLAB*15:02 status or zygosity. HLAB*15:02-positive individuals were found to have reduced risk if they also carried a chromosome 12 variant, chr12.9426934 (heterozygotes: relative risk = .71, p = .001; homozygotes: relative risk = .23, p < .001). All significant variants lie within intronic or intergenic regions with poorly understood functional consequence. In silico functional analysis of suggestive variants (p < 5e-6) identified through the primary and subanalyses (stratified by HLAB*15:02 status and drug exposure) suggests that genetic variation within regulatory DNA may contribute to risk indirectly by disrupting the regulation of pathology-related genes. The genes implicated were specific either to the primary analysis (CD9), HLAB*15:02 carriers (DOCK10), noncarriers (ABCA1), carbamazepine exposure (HLAE), or phenytoin exposure (CD24).

Significance

We identified variants that could explain why some carriers of HLAB*15:02 tolerate treatment, and why some noncarriers develop ASM-induced SJS/TEN. Additionally, this analysis suggests that the mixing of HLAB*15:02 carrier status in previous studies might have masked variants contributing to susceptibility, and that inheritance of risk for ASM-induced SJS/TEN is complex, likely involving multiple risk variants.

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