Journal of Pediatric Research (Mar 2022)

Thiopurine-S-Methyltransferase Gene Polymorphism and Drug-related Toxicity in Children Treated for Acute Leukemia and Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

  • Eda Ataseven,
  • Buket Kosova,
  • Çağdaş Aktan,
  • Zafer Kurugöl,
  • Mehmet Kantar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4274/jpr.galenos.2021.35492
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 60 – 65

Abstract

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Aim:Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) is an essential enzyme in the metabolism of thiopurine drugs, and its activity may change due to different polymorphisms in the TPMT gene. The TPMT gene has different genetic polymorphisms in different ethnic groups. This study aimed to determine the frequency of TPMT polymorphisms in children with acute leukemia/non-Hodgkin lymphoma (AL/NHL) and healthy children and to evaluate their association with severe toxicities in the study population.Materials and Methods:Sixty-seven pediatric AL/NHL patients and 84 healthy children were evaluated. Genotyping for the TPMT*2, TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B, TPMT*3C, TPMT*4, TPMT*5, TPMT*6, and TPMT*7 alleles were performed by the real-time polymerase chain reaction technique. The number of grade 3 or higher hematologic and hepatic toxicities were recorded from the patient charts.Results:In the AL/NHL patients, we found that the patients had generally wild-type TPMT*1 allele in 80.6%, whereas TPMT*2 (238G>C) was seen in 1.5%, TPMT*3A (c.460G>A and c.719A>G) in 0%, and TPMT*3B polymorphisms (460G>A) in 17.9%. We found wild-type TPMT*1 allele in 98.8% and TPMT*3B polymorphisms (460G>A) in 1.2% of the healthy volunteers. Grade ≥3 myelosuppression developed in 22/54 patients with the wild type allele, and it developed in 5/12 patients with TPMT*3B allele. Six (8.9%) patients had grade ≥3 aspartate aminotransferase elevations, 17 (25%) patients had grade ≥3 alanine transaminase elevations (1-5 times), and 42 patients had (62.6%) grade ≥3 total bilirubin elevations.Conclusion:TPMT*3B polymorphism was the most common allele detected in our study group. This allele frequency is very high in comparison to other studies from our country and it was over-represented in comparison to the healthy volunteers. We did not find any relationship between severe hematologic/hepatic toxicities and TPMT gene polymorphisms.

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