1. Alpha1-antitrypsin genotypes in patients with chronic pancreatitis.
- Author
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Witt H, Kage A, Luck W, and Becker M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Base Sequence, Case-Control Studies, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, Female, Genotype, Humans, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Pancreatitis diagnosis, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Probability, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Reference Values, Sensitivity and Specificity, alpha 1-Antitrypsin analysis, alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency diagnosis, Mutation, Pancreatitis genetics, alpha 1-Antitrypsin genetics, alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency genetics
- Abstract
Background: An association between alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and chronic pancreatitis (CP) has been reported in several case reports and two systematic studies. However, conflicting results have been shown in other studies of patients with CP. All previous studies were performed by phenotyping or by measurement of serum concentrations of alpha1-antitrypsin. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and CP by genetic analysis., Methods: Ninety-six unrelated children and adolescents with idiopathic or hereditary CP and 185 healthy controls were enrolled. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood leukocytes and the exons 5 and 7 of the alpha1-antitrypsin gene were amplified by polymerase chain reaction using mutagenic forward primers introducing a Taq I restriction site. Genotyping of the S allele and the Z allele was performed by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis using Taq I., Results: Seven out of 96 patients (7.3%) with CP were heterozygous for an alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency allele (4 for the S allele and 3 for the Z allele). No patient was homozygous or compound heterozygous for these alleles. Twenty out of 185 control individuals (10.8%) were heterozygous for the S or Z allele (PiS: 12 controls; PiZ: 8 controls). No significant differences were found between the allele frequency in patients and the control individuals (P > 0.1)., Conclusions: Alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency is not related to the pathogenesis of idiopathic or hereditary CP.
- Published
- 2002
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