| Literature DB >> 23888267 |
Senthilkumar Sankararaman1, Krishna Yanamandra, Dawn Napper, Gloria Caldito, Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Studies documented that platelet activating factor (PAF) and the enzyme platelet activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAFAH) play a very important role in the pathogenesis of neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). In this retrospective, case-controlled pilot study, the authors investigated the prevalence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (Ile198Thr and Ala379Val) of the PAFAH gene. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We screened 570 blood samples from both Caucasian and African-American preterm infants in the Northwest Louisiana population for the above mentioned PAFAH gene polymorphisms. Out of 570 infants, 36 had stage I or II NEC based on diagnostic coding, the International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, Clinical Modification, 2009 (ICD-9-CM). The remaining infants without an ICD-9-CM diagnosis of NEC were recruited as control population. The DNA was isolated and restriction fragment length polymorphism microplate polymerase chain reaction assay was performed.Entities:
Keywords: Necrotizing enterocolitis; Neonates; PAF; PAF acetylhydrolase; PAFAH; Platelet activating factor; Preterm; Single nucleotide polymorphisms
Year: 2013 PMID: 23888267 PMCID: PMC3710407 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Summary statistics on demographic and gestational characteristics of the study subjects
| NEC | Ethnicity | N | Birth weight (gms) | Gestational age (weeks) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Range | Mean | Range | Mean | |||
| Yes | C | 20 | 1100-2837 | 2149 | 29.7 - 36.8 | 34.2 |
| No | C | 192 | 720 - 2609 | 2278 | 27.6 - 36.8 | 33.9 |
| Yes | AA | 16 | 810 - 1510 | 1224 | 24.7 - 32.1 | 29.1 |
| No | AA | 342 | 540 - 2480 | 1965 | 23.4 - 36.8 | 32.8 |
NEC – necrotizing enterocolitis; C- Caucasian; AA – African-American.
Study population classified based on three variables (ethnicity, presence or absence of NEC and the study genotypes)
| PAFAH Genotypes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethnicity | NEC | (1) | (2) | (3) | Total |
| Caucasian | Yes | 0 | 1 | 19 | 20 |
| Caucasian | No | 7 | 36 | 149 | 192 |
| African-American | Yes | 0 | 7 | 9 | 16 |
| African-American | No | 22 | 123 | 197 | 342 |
| Total | 29 | 167 | 374 | 570 | |
PAFAH Genotypes – (1) is 198 ThrThr + 379 ValVal (homozygous abnormal genotype), (2) is 198 IleThr + 379AlaVal (heterozygous abnormal genotype) and (3) is 198IleIle + 379AlaAla (homozygous normal genotype).
Study population cross classified by three variables (ethnicity, presence or absence of NEC and the study genotypes)
| Ethnicity | NEC | Abnormal genotype | Normal genotype | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caucasian | Yes | 1 | 19 | 20 |
| Caucasian | No | 43 | 149 | 192 |
| African-American | Yes | 7 | 9 | 16 |
| African-American | No | 145 | 197 | 342 |
| Total | 196 | 374 | 570 |
In view of small numbers, the homozygous abnormal genotype (genotype 1 in Table 2) and heterozygous abnormal genotype (genotype 2 in Table 2) were combined into one category (abnormal genotype).
Results of multiple logistic regression analysis on the study population for the occurrence of NEC
| Factor | Odds ratio (OR) | 95% CI for OR | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Race (C vs. AA) | 2.03 | 1.01 – 4.07 | 0.046* |
| Genotype | |||
| Abnormal vs. Normal | 0.62 | 0.27 – 1.42 | 0.26NS |
C- Caucasian; AA – African-American. *Significant at 5% level (0.01 < p-value < 0.05) NS Not significant at 5% level (p-value > 0.05).