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Genetic predisposition for the development of lamotrigine-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome/toxic epidermal necrolysis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Sayan Kumar DasAnanyan SampathSameer Uz ZamanAyan Kumar PatiShubham Atal
Published in: Personalized medicine (2023)
Studies report an association between the expression of HLA alleles and lamotrigine (LTG)-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS). This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the association between HLA alleles and LTG-induced SJS in different populations. Two alleles, HLA-B*0702 and HLA-C*0702 , were deemed to be protective; five alleles, HLA-B*1502 , HLA-B*4403 , HLA-A*2402 , CYP2C19*2 and HLA-B*38 , may play a role in LTG-induced SJS, for which only data studying HLA-B*1502 could be extracted. The pooled odds ratio of 2.88, 95% CI of 1.60-5.17 and p-value of 0.0004 establish the presence of HLA-B*1502 as a major risk factor for the development of LTG-induced SJS/TEN. Although multiple alleles that may play a role in the development of LTG-induced SJS/TEN were identified, the expression of the risk alleles may be ancestry-specific, and genetic screening is warranted for preventing this life-threatening adverse drug reaction.
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