Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://rfos.fon.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/477
Title: CARD15 gene polyrnorphisms in Serbian patients with Crohn's disease: genotype-phenotype analysis
Authors: Protić, Marijana
Pavlović, Sonjia T.
Bojić, Daniela
Krstić, Miodrag N.
Radojičić, Zoran 
Tarabar, Dino K.
Stevanović, Ana Z.
Karan-Đurašević, Teodora Z.
Godjevac, Mina V.
Svorcan, Petar V.
Dapcević, Branka D.
Jojić, Njegica
Keywords: genotype-phenotype analysis;Crohn's disease;CARD15 gene
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia
Abstract: Objective Genetic heterogeneity and incomplete phenotype penetrance complicate genetic analysis of Crohn's disease (M. Studies in western Europe have shown that CARD15 polymorphisms increase susceptibility to CD, but frequencies vary within different European populations. The aim here was to evaluate the prevalence of CARD15 mutations and their phenotypic correlation in a Serbian population. Materials and methods 131 patients with CD, 65 patients with ulcerative colitis, and 88 healthy controls were genotyped for three common mutations (R702W, G908R, Leu1007insC) by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism. chi(2) and Student's t-test were used for statistical assessment. Results At least one CARD15 disease-associated allele was found in 35.11 % patients with CD, 14.77% of healthy controls (P=0.001), and 7.69% patients with ulcerative colitis (P= 0.0001). The L1007fs mutation showed a significant association with CD (P LT 0.0001). The frequency of R702W mutant allele was almost equal in the control group and CD patients Univariate analyses established that CARD15 carriers had a significantly higher risk of isolated ileal location [P=0.042; odds ratio (OR) 2.30; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.02-5.191, fibrostenotic behavior (P LT 0.0001; OR 9.86; 95% CI: 4.29-22.62), surgical resection (P=0.036; OR 2.2; CI, 1.046-4.626), and earlier onset of disease (P=0.026). Conclusion This study confirms that CARD15 carriers, especially L1007fs mutants, in central Europeans have an increased risk of CD and it is associated with earlier onset, ileal, fibrostenotic disease and a higher risk of surgery. Any influence of latitude is not matched by an east-west divide on the genotype frequency and phenotype of CD within Europe.
URI: https://rfos.fon.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/477
ISSN: 0954-691X
Appears in Collections:Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications

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