Literature DB >> 26633017

Association between Thiopurine S-Methyltransferase Polymorphisms and Azathioprine-Induced Adverse Drug Reactions in Patients with Autoimmune Diseases: A Meta-Analysis.

Yue-Ping Liu1,2, Han-Qing Xu1, Ming Li2, Xiang Yang1, Shu Yu1, Wei-Ling Fu1, Qing Huang1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Azathioprine (AZA) is widely used as an immunosuppressive drug in autoimmune diseases, but its use is limited by significant adverse drug reactions (ADRs). Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) is an important enzyme involved in AZA metabolism. Several clinical guidelines recommend determining TPMT genotype or phenotype before initiating AZA therapy. Although several studies have investigated the association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced ADRs, the results are inconsistent. The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether there is an association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced ADRs using meta-analysis.
METHODS: We explored PubMed, Web of Science and Embase for articles on TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced ADRs. Studies that compared TPMT polymorphisms with-ADRs and without-ADRs in patients with autoimmune diseases were included. Relevant outcome data from all the included articles were extracted and the pooled odds ratios (ORs) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated using Revman 5.3 software.
RESULTS: Eleven published studies, with a total of 651 patients with autoimmune diseases, investigated associations between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced ADRs, were included in this meta-analysis. Our meta-analysis demonstrated that TPMT polymorphisms were significantly associated with AZA-induced overall ADRs, bone marrow toxicity and gastric intolerance; pooled ORs were 3.12 (1.48-6.56), 3.76 (1.97-7.17) and 6.43 (2.04-20.25), respectively. TPMT polymorphisms were not associated with the development of hepatotoxicity; the corresponding pooled OR was 2.86 (95%CI: 0.32-25.86). However, the association in GI subset could be driven by one single study. After this study was excluded, the OR was 2.11 (95%CI: 0.36-12.42); namely, the association became negative.
CONCLUSIONS: Our meta-analysis demonstrated an association of TPMT polymorphisms with overall AZA-induced ADRs, bone marrow toxicity and gastric intolerance, but not with hepatotoxicity. The presence of the normal TPMT genotypes cannot preclude the development of ADRs during AZA treatment, TPMT genotyping prior to commencing AZA therapy cannot replace, may augment, the current practice of regular monitoring of the white blood cell. Because of small sample sizes, large and extensive exploration was required to validate our findings.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26633017      PMCID: PMC4669175          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144234

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Autoimmune diseases are a group of heterogeneous maladies in which the patient’s immune homeostasis becomes so deregulated that it mounts a destructive attack against the host’s tissues[1].Such diseases are characterized by the activation of T cells or B cells, or both, in the absence of an ongoing infection or other discernible cause[2, 3].The treatment strategies of such diseases include immunosuppressant—medication that alters thresholds of immune activation[3]. Azathioprine (AZA), a synthetic purine analogue, is widely used as immunosuppressive drug in autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and autoimmune bullous diseases. Despite of its efficacy, AZA was documented for adverse drug reactions (ADRs), such as bone marrow toxicity (BMT), gastric intolerance (GI), pancreatitis, hepatotoxicity, etc. The variable response to, and efficacy of, AZA are related to its pharmacogenetics. AZA is an inactive compound that must be metabolized to 6-thioguanine nucleotides (6-TGNs) to exert both the cytotoxic and therapeutic effects[4]. AZA is a pro-drug that is absorbed into the plasma and rapidly converted into 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) via a glutathione-dependent process. Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) is an important cytoplasmic enzyme catalyzing the methylation of 6-MP, competing with xanthine oxidase (XO) and hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) to determine the amount of 6-MP metabolized to 6-TGNs[5].The gene encoding for TPMT is subject to genetic polymorphisms that have been studied extensively. To date, a total of 37 mutations have been identified [6]. Approximately 4%-11% of individuals are heterozygous for a mutant TPMT allele and have intermediate TPMT activity; whereas approximately 1 in 300 individuals are homozygous or compound heterozygous and have very low or absent TPMT activity[7-9]. Individuals with intermediate TPMT activity accumulate 50% more 6-TGNs when compared with normal or high TPMT activity and thus at increased risk of AZA-induced ADRs [10]. Patients with deficient TPMT activity rapidly accumulate high doses of 6-TGNs, resulting in fatal bone marrow toxicity. Several clinical guidelines recommend determining TPMT genotypes or phenotypes before commencing AZA therapy [11-13].Drug label modifications for AZA approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also recommend pretesting, but does not mandate it[14]. The evidence base for these recommendations is unclear, particularly the crucial, direct evidence that pre-therapy TPMT measuring decreases BMT-specific mortality [15]. In addition, it is still controversial whether there is an association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced ADRs. AZA, the pro-drug of 6-mercaptopurine, is also widely prescribed to patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Previous meta-analyses on association between TPMT polymorphisms and thiopurine-induced ADRs in patients with IBD were available [16-18]. However, to the best of our knowledge, there were no similar meta-analyses in patients with auto-immune disease. In the present study, we performed a meta-analysis with the purpose of gaining more insight into a possible association between TPMT polymorphisms and the common AZA-induced ADRs by evaluation of the literature on this subject. The finding of a significant association may become indirect evidence for pretesting TPMT genotype before commencing AZA therapy in patients with autoimmune diseases.

Results

Literature search outcome

With the aforementioned search strategy, a total of 292 potentially relevant records were retrieved. 101 records were excluded because of publication type (review, case report, letter or comment and meeting/conference abstract). 87 records were excluded because they were duplicates and another 87 records were excluded after reviewing the titles and the abstracts for improper titles or abstracts; 17 full-text papers were deemed to be relevant and were examined in detail. 6 full-text papers were excluded for the reasons described in Fig 1. Finally, 11 studies [19-29] met the inclusion criteria, and were included in this meta-analysis.
Fig 1

Flowchart describing the systematic literature search and study selection process.

Characteristics of included studies

A total of 11 studies with 651 patients with autoimmune diseases were included in our meta-analysis and the average number of patients per study was 59, ranging from 9[26] to 126[29]. A summary of the included studies is listed in Table 1.The earliest studies were reported in 1999 [19, 20], while the latest was in 2014 [29].4 studies[20, 23, 24, 29] were about the association between TPMT polymorphism and AZA-induced ADRs in SLE patients, 3 studies [21, 25, 26] focused on this association in AIH patients, another 3 studies [19, 22, 28] were talking about the association in patients with rheumatic diseases or RA while 1 study [27] concentrated this association in patients with autoimmune bullous diseases. Only one of the eleven included studies reported the occurrence of AZA-induced pancreatitis [25], but data were insufficient to calculate OR and corresponding 95%CI. 6[20–22, 25, 27, 28]of the 11 studies were from research in Caucasian populations of European ancestry, while the other 5[19, 23, 24, 26, 29]studies were from Asian populations. We can see that TPMT*3A is the most common mutant allele in Caucasians while TPMT*3C is the most common in Asians. TPMT*2 was a relatively rare variant allele, which was only found in one study[27]. As can be observed in Table 1, 8 studies determined TPMT*2,*3A, *3B and *3C alleles[19, 20, 22, 24, 26–29], 2 studies determined TPMT*3A, *3B and *3C[21, 25], while 1 study determined TPMT*2,*3A, *3B, *3C and *6 [23]. When all the studies were considered, including a total of 651 patients, three homozygous mutant genotypes were detected, with a frequency of approximately 1/217.
Table 1

Characteristics of 11 studies included in this meta-analysis*.

AuthorYearCountryStudy DesignNo. of Patients IncludedDisease TPMT Genotypes DeterminedProfile of mutant TPMT polymorphismsDose of AZANo. of Overall ADRsNO. of BMTNO. of HepatotoxicityNO. of GIRef.
Naughton, M A1999UKCS78SLETPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C1 Homo.*3A; 2 Het. *3A;1 Het.*3C25–250 mg/day171331[16]
Ishioka, S1999JapanCS36Rheumatic DiseasesTPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C3 Het. *3C50 mg/dayNA7NANA[17]
Langley, P G2002UKCS53AIHTPMT*3A,*3B,*3C7 Het.*3A; 3 Het. *3B50–100 mg/dayNA3NANA[18]
Corominas, H2003SpainCS40RATPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C4 Het.*3A;1 Het.*3B50–100 mg/day62NA3[19]
Jun, J B # 2005KoreaCS94SLETPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C,*65 Het.*3C; 2 Het. *625–100 mg/day231714[20]
Okada, Y2005JapanCS18SLETPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C2 Het.*3C50 mg/dayNA3NANA[21]
Heneghan, M A2006UKCS86AIHTPMT*3A,*3B,*3CNA100 mg/day2213NANA[22]
Tamori, A2007JapanCS9AIHTPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C1 Homo.*3C50 mg/dayNA2NANA[23]
Bezier, M # 2008FranceCS33Autoimmune Bullous DiseasesTPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C1 Het. *3C; 1 Het.*22.7mg/kg/dayNA12NANA[24]
Tani, C2009ItalyCS78Rheumatic DiseasesTPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C1 Homo.*3A; 1 Het.*3A1.4mg/kg/dayNA1NANA[25]
Chen, D2014ChinaCS126SLETPMT*2,*3A,*3B,*3C4 Het. *3C.1.4–2.0 mg/kg/day443444[26]

*: The meta-analysis was performed on the studies looking at TPMT*3 family (including TPMT*3A, TPMT *3B and TPMT *3C).

#: All data being combined were the results from the same association model, thus Het*6 and Het*2 were not included in this meta-analysis.

CS: cross sectional; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; AIH: autoimmune hepatitis; RA: rheumatoid arthritis; AZA: azathioprine; TPMT: thiopurine S-methyltransferase; Homo.: homozygous; Het.: heterozygous; ADR: adverse drug reaction; NA: not available; GI: gastric intolerance.

*: The meta-analysis was performed on the studies looking at TPMT*3 family (including TPMT*3A, TPMT *3B and TPMT *3C). #: All data being combined were the results from the same association model, thus Het*6 and Het*2 were not included in this meta-analysis. CS: cross sectional; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; AIH: autoimmune hepatitis; RA: rheumatoid arthritis; AZA: azathioprine; TPMT: thiopurine S-methyltransferase; Homo.: homozygous; Het.: heterozygous; ADR: adverse drug reaction; NA: not available; GI: gastric intolerance. In order to make the study clearer to readers, the definitions of AZA-induced ADRs are summarized as below: AZA-induced BMT markedly varied between studies, but the threshold for the number of leucopenia was generally set at 3–4×109/L, and the number of neutrophils at 1.5×109/L. The definitions of AZA-induced hepatotoxicity also differed between studies, with the level of alanine transaminase (ALT) set at >2 times the upper limit of normal (ULN). Gastric intolerance was defined as occurrence of any or a combination of the following: nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia and abdominal pain with normal amylase and normal abdominal ultrasound. Positive TPMT polymorphisms were defined as: with one or more mutant TPMT alleles (TPMT *3A, TPMT *3B and TPMT *3C).

Meta-analysis outcomes

TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced overall ADRs

6 studies [19, 21–23,25, 27], including 384 patients, analyzed the association between TPMT polymorphisms and overall ADRs. Of the 101 patients with overall ADRs, 15 (14.9%) patients were TPMT polymorphism positive and18 (6.4%) out of 283 patients without overall ADRs were TPMT polymorphisms positive. The pooled OR (3.12, 95%CI: 1.48–6.56) indicated a significant association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced overall ADRs (Fig 2A).
Fig 2

Forest plots of association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced overall ADRs (A), bone marrow toxicity (B), hepatotoxicity (C) and gastric intolerance (D).

Total: total number of patients with or without ADRs. Events: number of patients with one or more mutant TPMT alleles (TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B and TPMT*3C) within the ADRs or no ADRs group.

Forest plots of association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced overall ADRs (A), bone marrow toxicity (B), hepatotoxicity (C) and gastric intolerance (D).

Total: total number of patients with or without ADRs. Events: number of patients with one or more mutant TPMT alleles (TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B and TPMT*3C) within the ADRs or no ADRs group.

TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced BMT

All the included studies, with 651 patients, reported the association between TPMT polymorphisms and BMT. Of 92 patients with BMT, 14(15.2%) were TPMT polymorphisms positive, compared with 31(5.6%) of the 559 patients without BMT. There was a significant association between TPMT polymorphisms and BMT (pooled OR = 3.76, 95%CI = 1.97–7.17) (Fig 2B).

TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced GI

4 studies [20, 22, 23, 29] which included 338 patients, reported the correlation between TPMT polymorphisms and gastric intolerance. Of the 16 patients with GI, 3 (18.8%) patients were TPMT polymorphisms positive, compared with 15(4.7%) of the 322 patients without GI. The pooled OR (95%CI) was 6.43 (2.04–20.25) indicated a significant association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced GI (Fig 2C).

TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induced hepatotoxicity

2 studies [20, 29], which included 204 patients, reported the correlation between TPMT polymorphisms and hepatotoxicity. Of the 6 patients with hepatotoxicity, no patients were TPMT polymorphisms positive, compared with 8 (4.0%) of the 198 patients without hepatotoxicity. The overall OR (2.86, 95%CI: 0.32–25.86) demonstrated that TPMT polymorphisms did not predict AZA-induced hepatotoxicity (Fig 2D).

Subgroup analysis

Subgroup analysis according to ethnicity

We performed subgroup analysis according to ethnicity in order to investigate whether the association signal differs among different ethnic origin. From the results, we can see that the pooled ORs (95%CI) of Caucasian population subgroup and Asian population subgroup in BMT subset were 2.28(0.85–6.09) and 3.78 (1.49–9.57), respectively. These results still showed a significant association between TPMT polymorphisms and AZA-induce BMT in Asian populations while the association in Caucasian populations was not significant (Fig 3A).
Fig 3

Forest plots of subgroup analysis according to ethnicity (A) and disease (B) in BMT subset.

SLE: systematic lupus erythematosus. AIH: autoimmune hepatitis. RA: rheumatoid arthritis. Total: total number of patients with or without ADRs. Events: number of patients with one or more mutant TPMT alleles (TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B and TPMT*3C) within the ADRs or no ADRs group.

Forest plots of subgroup analysis according to ethnicity (A) and disease (B) in BMT subset.

SLE: systematic lupus erythematosus. AIH: autoimmune hepatitis. RA: rheumatoid arthritis. Total: total number of patients with or without ADRs. Events: number of patients with one or more mutant TPMT alleles (TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B and TPMT*3C) within the ADRs or no ADRs group. Because of small sample size, heterozygous and homozygous patients were grouped together as TPMT polymorphism positive. In order to better investigate the association between TPMT heterosigosity and AZA-induced BMT, an extra meta-analysis by excluding individuals with homozygosity genotypes of the genotyped TPMT polymorphisms was performed. The pooled OR (95%CI) of BMT subset was 3.47(1.78–6.79). This result was consistent with the original result, which indicated that TPMT heterosigosity was also associated with AZA-induced overall BMT.

Subgroup analysis according to disease

We also performed subgroup analysis according to disease in order to investigate whether the association signal differs among different disease sources. From the results, we can see that the pooled ORs (95%CI) of SLE subgroup, AIH subgroup, RA subgroup and autoimmune bullous diseases subgroup in BMT subset were 4.16 (1.59–6.88), 5.18 (1.36–19.69), 4.21 (1.25–14.15) and 0.31 (0.01–7.05), respectively (Fig 3B).

Sensitivity analysis and publication bias

Sensitivity analysis was performed to examine the influence set by the individual study on the overall ORs by deleting each study once in every subset. Results in overall ADRs, BMT and hepatotoxicity subsets were consistent with the original results. However, the association in GI subset could be driven by one single study [22]. After this study was excluded, the OR (95%CI) was 2.31 (0.36–12.42), namely, the association became negative. As a recommendation, tests for funnel plot asymmetry should not be used when there are fewer than 10 studies in the meta-analysis [30], thus only funnel plot of BMT subset is shown in Fig 4. Egger’s test was used to provide statistical evidence of potential publication bias. The results did not suggest any evidence of publication bias.
Fig 4

Funnel plot of BMT subset.

The dotted vertical line indicates the overall OR. S.E. = standard error, OR = odds ratio. Each circle represents an eligible study.

Funnel plot of BMT subset.

The dotted vertical line indicates the overall OR. S.E. = standard error, OR = odds ratio. Each circle represents an eligible study.

Discussion

AZA is widely used as immunosuppressive drug in autoimmune diseases. For instance, it has most often been prescribed as an alternative to cyclophosphamide and methotrexate (MTX) in SLE and RA [23], respectively. However, safety concerns do exist, because moderate to serious adverse events may occur. Gastric intolerance, bone marrow toxicity, hepatotoxicity and pancreatitis were among the most frequently reported clinically relevant adverse events. These events may be divided into dose-independent idiosyncratic reactions and dose-related, pharmacologically explainable toxicity [31].The results of our meta-analysis demonstrated that patients who were TPMT polymorphism positive were more likely to experience overall ADRs, BMT and GI, but not hepatotoxicity. However, several aspects have to be taken into consideration when interpreting the results of our study. First, we identified that there have been a number of variants tested in the included studies for our meta-analysis. All the included studies determined the TPMT*3 family, while some studies tested additional variants, such as, a study of Korean population determined TPMT*6[23].TPMT*3A is the most common variant allele in Caucasian populations, while TPMT*3C is the most common mutant allele in Asian and African populations [32, 33]. TPMT*6 may be a potentially unique mutant allele within the Korean population, which was previously found in Korean children [34].Genotyping for the TPMT*3 family of variant alleles (TPMT*3A, TPMT*3B and TPMT*3C) will detect over 92% of low activity alleles and inclusion of TPMT*2 pushes this to over 95%[14]. However, all the studies tested the most common polymorphisms and these would miss rare variants, which may lead to the underestimation of the effect of TPMT polymorphisms on AZA-induced ADRs. Second, TPMT polymorphism can explain a variable proportion of AZA-related ADRs, but in no way explain all episodes of ADRs [15]. In other words, the majority cases of ADRs were not TPMT-related, thus TPMT genotyping prior to commencing AZA therapy cannot replace, may augment, the current practice of regular monitoring of the white blood cell. Our study showed that TPMT polymorphism positive had specificity of 94.10% (526/559), but at the expense of a sensitivity of 16.30% (15/92) for predicting AZA-induced BMT. The specificity and sensitivity of TPMT polymorphism positive for predicting overall ADRs were 92.93% (263/283) and 14.85% (15/101).Several reasons may account for the gap between TPMT polymorphism and ADRs. First, up to 37 mutations in TPMT have been reported[6]. In included studies, 3 to 5 inactive TPMT alleles were investigated. We assume that patients with ADRs had one of the rare inactive TPMT alleles that were not examined. Another factor is the influence of variations in other genes, such as hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase(HPRT)[26]and inosine triphosphate pyrophosphatase(ITPA)[35].The development of AZA-induced ADRs is a multi-factorial event, caused by a co-influence of factors, other than variants in TPMT[36, 37], and a combined evaluation of the potential factors may enhance the correlation with ADRs. If possible, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) was required to investigate the associations between potential genes and ADRs. For instance, a study by Zalbala [37] reported variants associated with thiopurine-related BMT that was identified by GWAS. They indentified that rs372996 in interleukia 6 singnal transducer (IL6ST) gene and re3749598 in follistatin-like 5 (FSTL5) gene as new bone marrow toxicity susceptibility candidate genes after thiopurine treatment in IBD patients. The ORs (95%CI) were 3.41 (1.71–6.78) and 3.67 (1.68–8.01), respectively. Another GWAS association study published in Nature Genetics revealed variants associated with thiopurine-induced pancreatitis in patients with IBD [38]. Strong evidence of association within the class II HLA region were reported, with the most significant association identified at rs2647087 [OR (95%CI) 2.59 (2.07–3.26), p value of 2× 10−16]. Third, sample sizes of included studies were relatively small, ranging from 9 to 126 patients, which will increase uncertainty. The results of sensitivity analysis in our study showed that the association could be driven by one single study in GI subset. After this study was excluded, the association in GI subset became negative. In this study, three patients with TPMT polymorphism positive were observed to have GI reactions. Extensive exploration was required to support whether this was a chance phenomenon or not. Besides, a point of weakness in our study is the wide heterogeneity of patient cohort in terms of diagnosis. Although the pooled OR (95%CI) in BMT subset was 3.76 (1.97–7.17), subgroup analysis in BMT subset showed the pooled ORs (95%CI) of SLE subgroup, AIH subgroup, RA subgroup and autoimmune bullous diseases subgroup in BMT subset were 4.74 (0.53–42.25), 4.32 (0.42–44.75), 4.11 (1.17–14.41) and 3.78 (1.49–9.57), respectively. Fourth, disease-related BMT episodes are often difficult to distinguish from those caused by drugs, such as BMT is a feature of SLE disease activity. The study by Naughton et al. [20]detected that 13 patients with BMT, however subsequent investigations found that, in three of these cases, the BMT was disease related, while AZA was strongly implicated in the remaining 10 cases. Fifth, there is no doubt in the literature that patients who are homozygous or compound heterozygous for a variant allele confer a very high-risk of early severe BMT. This was confirmed by our study; as 2 out of the three homozygotes detected in all the 651 patients experienced early, severe leucopenia requiring hospital management. Such susceptible patients can be identified by TPMT genotyping prior to commencing AZA therapy, thus avoiding potentially fatal consequences. Prospective studies are required, however, to explore the cost-effectiveness of this approach due to low frequency of homozygous individuals. Sixth,because of the life threatening nature of AZA-induced BMT, pretesting for TPMT genotype before the initiation of AZA therapy has increasingly been accepted clinically. Several guidelines recommend determining TPMT status before AZA therapy. However, these recommendations are considered to be premature from an evidence-based perspective, due to the absence of direct and crucial evidence that TPMT pretreatment testing decreases BMT-specific mortality [15]. In conclusion, our meta-analysis demonstrated an association of TPMT polymorphisms with overall AZA-induced ADRs, bone marrow toxicity and gastric intolerance, but not with hepatotoxicity. Because of small sample sizes and wide heterogeneity of patient cohort in terms of diagnosis, large and extensive exploration was required to support whether these findings were chance phenomena or not. TPMT polymorphism can explain a variable proportion of AZA-related ADRs, but in no way explain all episodes of ADRs. In other words, the presence of the normal TPMT genotype cannot preclude the development of ADRs during AZA treatment, TPMT genotyping prior to commencing AZA therapy cannot replace, may augment, the current practice of regular monitoring of the white blood cell.

Materials and Methods

Literature search strategy

Medline (using PubMed as the search engine), The Excerpta Medica Database (Embase) and Web of science were searched to identify relevant publications published in English with an end date of January 22, 2015. Only human-related literature was searched. We employed both MeSH terms and free text words (in Title/Abstract fields) for ‘TPMT’ or ‘thiopurine S-methyltransferase’ or ‘thiopurine methytransferase’ AND ‘azathioprine ‘ or ‘imuran’ or ‘6-mercaptopurine’ AND (‘autoimmune diseases’ OR ‘SLE’ or ‘systemic lupus erythematosus’ or ‘lupus erythematosus disseminatus’ or ‘libman scks disease’ OR ‘RA’ or ‘Rheumatoid Arthritis’ OR ‘AIH’ or ‘Autoimmune Hepatitis’). We also performed a manual search of the references listed in the articles identified in the search for additional eligible studies. The search was conducted independently by two reviewers (YPL and HQX).

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

The abstracts and full texts were read independently by the two reviewers (YPL and HQX). The following inclusion criteria were used: 1) studies that compared TPMT polymorphisms between with-ADRs and without-ADRs in patients with autoimmune diseases; 2) articles published in English and being human-related were included; 3) expert opinions supported by a preliminary literature review indicated that there was likely to be very few randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) on this topic; therefore, any study design (cross-sectional cohort, prospective cohort and case control studies) were included in this meta-analysis [39]; 4) all patients included in this meta-analysis were genotyped for TPMT polymorphisms; 5) studies that tested at least TPMT*3A, TPMT *3B, TPMT *3C, regardless of whether they tested additional mutant alleles. Studies on non-autoimmune diseases patients were excluded. Reviews, letters, comments, and conference abstracts were also excluded because of limited data. Further, publications identified as duplicates were excluded.

Data extraction strategy

Two reviewers (YPL and HQX) independently extracted relevant data from each eligible study. The following data were collected: author’s name, publication year, country, study type, number of enrolled patients, disease, profile of mutant TPMT polymorphisms, AZA dose, number of patients that were mutant-type TPMT with and without an ADR, TPMT polymorphism type, number of homozygous mutant-type TPMT, and definitions of ADRs. Disagreements between reviewers were resolved by discussion or by consensus including a third author (QH).

Statistical analysis

In order to make results of the present meta-analysis more robust and reasonable, all data being combined were the results from the same association model. In addition, TPMT*3B is usually in tight linkage disequilibrium with the *3C SNP, resulting in the common allele, *3A[40]. Thus, the meta-analysis was performed on the studies looking at TPMT*3 family (including TPMT*3A, TPMT *3B and TPMT *3C). OR and 95% CIs were calculated to mainly evaluate the strength of associations between TPMT*3A/TPMT*3B/ TPMT*3C and AZA-induced ADRs. Not all studies reported all ADRs analyzed in this meta-analysis, and so only studies that reported the adverse events of interest were analyzed for the association between TPMT polymorphisms and that adverse event. The included studies displayed heterogeneity concerning diagnosis, the time to onset of AZA-induced ADRs, definitions of the ADRs, and study designs. The degrees of included studies’ heterogeneity were explored using the chi-squared test of heterogeneity, and inconsistency index (I2). Considering the low statistical power of these tests, a p-value of <0.10 or an I2>50% was defined as significant heterogeneity. ORs from different groups were combined using fixed or random effects models, which depends on the absence or presence of significant heterogeneity. Subgroup analysis was conducted according to ethnicity or disease in order to investigate whether the association signal differs among different ethnic origin or different diseases. Sensitivity analysis was performed to assess the stability of the results; namely, a single study in the meta-analysis was deleted each time to reflect the influence of the individual data set to the overall OR. Publication bias was assessed by visual inspection of the funnel plot for symmetry, and formal statistical testing using the Egger test. The meta-analysis was conducted using RevMan 5.3 software.

PRISMA 2009 Checklist.

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Genetic checklist.

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  40 in total

1.  Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium guidelines for thiopurine methyltransferase genotype and thiopurine dosing.

Authors:  M V Relling; E E Gardner; W J Sandborn; K Schmiegelow; C-H Pui; S W Yee; C M Stein; M Carrillo; W E Evans; T E Klein
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2011-01-26       Impact factor: 6.875

2.  Clinical pharmacogenetics implementation consortium guidelines for thiopurine methyltransferase genotype and thiopurine dosing: 2013 update.

Authors:  M V Relling; E E Gardner; W J Sandborn; K Schmiegelow; C-H Pui; S W Yee; C M Stein; M Carrillo; W E Evans; J K Hicks; M Schwab; T E Klein
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 6.875

3.  A pharmacogenetics study of TPMT and ITPA genes detects a relationship with side effects and clinical response in patients with inflammatory bowel disease receiving Azathioprine.

Authors:  William Zabala-Fernández; Manuel Barreiro-de Acosta; Ana Echarri; Daniel Carpio; Aurelio Lorenzo; Javier Castro; David Martínez-Ares; Santos Pereira; Ignacio Martin-Granizo; Marta Corton; Angel Carracedo; Francisco Barros
Journal:  J Gastrointestin Liver Dis       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 2.008

Review 4.  Assessment of thiopurine S-methyltransferase activity in patients prescribed thiopurines: a systematic review.

Authors:  Ronald A Booth; Mohammed T Ansari; Evelin Loit; Andrea C Tricco; Laura Weeks; Steve Doucette; Becky Skidmore; Margaret Sears; Richmond Sy; Jacob Karsh
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2011-06-21       Impact factor: 25.391

5.  Association of thiopurine methyltransferase status with azathioprine side effects in Chinese patients with systemic lupus erythematosus.

Authors:  Dongying Chen; Fan Lian; Shiwen Yuan; Yixi Wang; Zhongping Zhan; Yujin Ye; Qian Qiu; Hanshi Xu; Liuqin Liang; Xiuyan Yang
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2013-12-10       Impact factor: 2.980

6.  Implementation of TPMT testing.

Authors:  Lynne Lennard
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 4.335

7.  New genetic associations in thiopurine-related bone marrow toxicity among inflammatory bowel disease patients.

Authors:  William Zabala; Raquel Cruz; Manuel Barreiro-de Acosta; María Chaparro; Julián Panes; Ana Echarri; Maria Esteve; Daniel Carpio; Montserrat Andreu; Esther García-Planella; Eugeni Domenech; Angel Carracedo; Javier P Gisbert; Francisco Barros
Journal:  Pharmacogenomics       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 2.533

8.  Association between thiopurine S-methyltransferase polymorphisms and thiopurine-induced adverse drug reactions in patients with inflammatory bowel disease: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Yue-Ping Liu; Hai-Yan Wu; Xiang Yang; Han-Qing Xu; Yong-Chuan Li; Da-Chuan Shi; Jun-Fu Huang; Qing Huang; Wei-Ling Fu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-03-23       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  HLA-DQA1-HLA-DRB1 variants confer susceptibility to pancreatitis induced by thiopurine immunosuppressants.

Authors:  Graham A Heap; Michael N Weedon; Claire M Bewshea; Abhey Singh; Mian Chen; Jack B Satchwell; Julian P Vivian; Kenji So; Patrick C Dubois; Jane M Andrews; Vito Annese; Peter Bampton; Martin Barnardo; Sally Bell; Andy Cole; Susan J Connor; Tom Creed; Fraser R Cummings; Mauro D'Amato; Tawfique K Daneshmend; Richard N Fedorak; Timothy H Florin; Daniel R Gaya; Emma Greig; Jonas Halfvarson; Alisa Hart; Peter M Irving; Gareth Jones; Amir Karban; Ian C Lawrance; James C Lee; Charlie Lees; Raffi Lev-Tzion; James O Lindsay; John Mansfield; Joel Mawdsley; Zia Mazhar; Miles Parkes; Kirstie Parnell; Timothy R Orchard; Graham Radford-Smith; Richard K Russell; David Reffitt; Jack Satsangi; Mark S Silverberg; Giacomo C Sturniolo; Mark Tremelling; Epameinondas V Tsianos; David A van Heel; Alissa Walsh; Gill Watermeyer; Rinse K Weersma; Sebastian Zeissig; Jamie Rossjohn; Arthur L Holden; Tariq Ahmad
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2014-09-14       Impact factor: 38.330

10.  Thiopurine methyltransferase genotype-phenotype discordance and thiopurine active metabolite formation in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

Authors:  Lynne Lennard; Cher Suzanne Cartwright; Rachel Wade; Susan M Richards; Ajay Vora
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 4.335

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  12 in total

1.  Comprehensive analysis of patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) combined with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) infection and seropositive for anti-aquaporin-4 antibody.

Authors:  Jia Liu; Li Xu; Zhuo-Lin Chen; Min Li; Huan Yi; Fu-Hua Peng
Journal:  Bosn J Basic Med Sci       Date:  2018-02-20       Impact factor: 3.363

2.  Preclinical evaluation of NUDT15-guided thiopurine therapy and its effects on toxicity and antileukemic efficacy.

Authors:  Rina Nishii; Takaya Moriyama; Laura J Janke; Wenjian Yang; Chase C Suiter; Ting-Nien Lin; Lie Li; Kentaro Kihira; Hidemi Toyoda; Ute Hofmann; Matthias Schwab; Masatoshi Takagi; Tomohiro Morio; Atsushi Manabe; Shirley Kham; Nan Jiang; Karen R Rabin; Motohiro Kato; Katsuyoshi Koh; Allen Eng-Juh Yeoh; Hiroki Hori; Jun J Yang
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 22.113

3.  High frequency of mutant thiopurine S-methyltransferase genotypes in Mexican patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Mireya Ramirez-Florencio; Silvia Jiménez-Morales; Rosa Elda Barbosa-Cobos; Daniela Josabeth López-Cano; Julian Ramírez-Bello
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2017-12-20       Impact factor: 2.980

Review 4.  Case Studies Illustrating Focal Alzheimer's, Fluent Aphasia, Late-Onset Memory Loss, and Rapid Dementia.

Authors:  Gamze Balci Camsari; Melissa E Murray; Neill R Graff-Radford
Journal:  Neurol Clin       Date:  2016-06-03       Impact factor: 3.806

Review 5.  Pharmacogenetics and interstitial lung disease.

Authors:  Justin M Oldham; Imre Noth; Fernando J Martinez
Journal:  Curr Opin Pulm Med       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 3.155

Review 6.  Thiopurine S-methyltransferase polymorphisms in acute lymphoblastic leukemia, inflammatory bowel disease and autoimmune disorders: influence on treatment response.

Authors:  Rachid Abaji; Maja Krajinovic
Journal:  Pharmgenomics Pers Med       Date:  2017-05-05

Review 7.  Evaluating the role of GSTP1 genetic polymorphism (rs1695, 313A>G) as a predictor in cyclophosphamide-induced toxicities.

Authors:  Jin-Yu Gong; Si-Yin Peng; Kai Xing; Li Fan; Sheng-Lan Tan; Zhi-Ying Luo; Hai-Yan Yuan; Ping Xu; Jian-Quan Luo
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-03-19       Impact factor: 1.817

8.  Thiopurine methyltransferase genotype and activity cannot predict outcomes of azathioprine maintenance therapy for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody associated vasculitis: A retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Arno C Hessels; Abraham Rutgers; Jan Stephan F Sanders; Coen A Stegeman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-09       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Utilizing a user-centered approach to develop and assess pharmacogenomic clinical decision support for thiopurine methyltransferase.

Authors:  Khoa A Nguyen; Himalaya Patel; David A Haggstrom; Alan J Zillich; Thomas F Imperiale; Alissa L Russ
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2019-10-17       Impact factor: 2.796

Review 10.  Thiopurine Drugs in the Treatment of Ulcerative Colitis: Identification of a Novel Deleterious Mutation in TPMT.

Authors:  Pierre-Olivier Harmand; Jérôme Solassol
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2020-10-16       Impact factor: 4.096

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