Association of a tumor necrosis factor promoter polymorphism with susceptibility to alcoholic steatohepatitis
- PMID: 9214463
- DOI: 10.1002/hep.510260119
Association of a tumor necrosis factor promoter polymorphism with susceptibility to alcoholic steatohepatitis
Abstract
Twin concordance studies suggest that genetic factors play a role in determining why only a minority of heavy drinkers develop hepatitis and cirrhosis. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) has emerged as the "final common pathway" in the pathogenesis of alcohol-related hepatic necro-inflammation. We have examined the frequency of the two recently described polymorphisms of the TNF-alpha promoter in 150 patients with biopsy-proven alcoholic liver disease and 145 healthy volunteers. There was a significant excess of the rare allele (TNFA-A; G(-238) --> A) at position -238 in patients with steatohepatitis compared with controls or patients without this lesion. This is consistent with previous suggestions that the TNFA-A allele, which falls within a putative Y regulation box of the TNF-alpha promoter, is associated with increased TNF-alpha expression. No differences were observed for the polymorphism at position -308.
Comment in
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Does tumor necrosis factor play a role in alcoholic steatohepatitis? The potential pitfalls of a case-controlled allelic association analysis.Hepatology. 1997 Jul;26(1):232-3. doi: 10.1002/hep.510260132. Hepatology. 1997. PMID: 9214475 No abstract available.
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