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Ancestry, and leucopenia in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus


AUTHORS

Chung CP , Karakoc G , Liu G , Gamboa JL , Mosley JD , Cox NJ , Stein CM , Kawai V , . Lupus science & medicine. ; 9(1).

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: SLE is more prevalent in populations of African (AA) than European ancestry (EA) and leucopenia is common. A homozygous variant in (rs2814778-CC) is associated with lower white cell counts; the variant is common in AA but not EA populations. We hypothesised that in SLE: (1) leucopenia is more frequent in patients of AA than EA, and (2) the CC genotype accounts for the higher frequency of leucopenia in AA patients.

METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study in patients with SLE at a tertiary care system. Ancestry was defined by genetic principal components. We compared the rate of leucopenia, thrombocytopenia and anaemia between (a) EA and AA patients, and (b) -CT/TT and CC genotype in AA patients.

RESULTS: The cohort included 574 patients of EA and 190 of AA; -CC genotype was common in AA (70%) but not EA (0%) patients. Rates of leucopenia for ancestry and genotype were AA 60.0% vs EA 36.8 % (p=1.9E-08); CC 67.7% vs CT/TT 42.1% (p=9.8E-04). The rate of leucopenia did not differ by ancestry comparing EA patients versus AA with CT/TT genotype (p=0.59). Thrombocytopenia (22.2% vs 13.2%, p=0.004) and anaemia (88.4% vs 66.2%, p=3.7E-09) were more frequent in AA patients but were not associated with genotype (p=0.82 and p=0.84, respectively).

CONCLUSIONS: SLE of AA had higher rates of anaemia, leucopenia, and thrombocytopenia than those of EA; only the difference in leucopenia was explained by -CC genotype. This genotype could affect clinical practice.



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