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. 2004 Jun;23(6):696-700.
doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2003.07.012.

Effect of the TNF-alpha-promoter polymorphism on cardiac allograft rejection

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Effect of the TNF-alpha-promoter polymorphism on cardiac allograft rejection

Maninder Bedi et al. J Heart Lung Transplant. 2004 Jun.

Abstract

Background: A polymorphism exists in the tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) promoter (position -308, G/A = TNFA1/TNFA2). The TNFA2 allele is associated with increased TNF-alpha production in vitro and has been reported to increase the risk of allograft rejection in pediatric recipients of cardiac transplantation. We examined the effect of the TNFA2 allele on the risk of allograft rejection in adult cardiac transplant recipients.

Methods: We prospectively analyzed 57 subjects (aged 54 +/- 11 years, 84% men, 49% ischemic) who underwent cardiac transplantation between October 1996 and July 2001. Patients were observed after transplantation (mean, 910 +/- 605 days) and the frequency of allograft rejection (biopsy Grade > or =2) in patients with the TNFA2 allele (Group A, n = 15) was compared with TNFA1 homozygotes (Group B, n = 42). Overall survival and time to rejection episodes also were compared between groups.

Results: The frequency of allograft rejection was similar between groups (Group A, 8/15 [56%]; Group B, 22/42 [52%]; p = 0.77). Time to rejection also was comparable (Group A, 17 +/- 11 days; Group B, 20 +/- 20 days, p = 0.74). Overall post-transplant survival was similar between groups (1- and 2-year percentage survival: Group A, 87% and 78%, Group B, 88% and 82%, p = 0.35).

Conclusion: The TNFA2 allele was not associated with increased risk of rejection in adult cardiac transplant recipients. The impact of this polymorphism on overall post-transplant outcomes will require investigation in larger multicenter studies.

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