Title of article :
Association Between Human Leukocyte Antigen and COVID-19 Severity
Author/Authors :
Hajebi ، Reza Department of General Surgery - Sina Hospital, School of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ajam ، Ali Students’ Scientific Research Center (SSRC), School of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Karbalai Saleh ، Shahrokh Department of Cardiology - School of Medicine, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ashraf ، Haleh Research Development Center, Sina Hospital, Cardiac Primary Prevention Research Center (CPPRC), Cardiovascular Diseases Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ostadali Dehaghi ، Mohammadreza Hematology, Oncology and Stem Cell Transplantation Research Center, Cell Therapy and Hematopoietic Stem Cells Transplantation Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Moradi Tabriz ، Hedieh Department of Pathology - School of Medicine, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Pazoki ، Marzieh Department of Internal Medicine - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Khalili ، Fatemeh School of Medicine - Arak University of Medical Sciences
From page :
400
To page :
405
Abstract :
In the last days of 2019, a new coronavirus emerged in Wuhan, China, and less than three months its disease, now called COVID-19, was announced a global pandemic by WHO. COVID-19 usually causes respiratory symptoms and can lead to more severe conditions like ARDS. HLA has a crucial role in regulating the immune system; thus, different HLA allele types can be a protective or risk factor for some diseases, so we aimed to find such associations to determine whether some alleles can predict susceptibility or resistibility to COVID-19 and finally facilitate vaccine development. In this case-control study, 15 admitted COVID-19 cases with severe symptoms and ten individuals with mild COVID-19 symptoms were enrolled in the case and control groups, respectively. They were genotyped for HLA A/B/DR loci using a low-resolution HLA typing test. These alleles were more prevalent in case (severe COVID-19) group: A*24 (53.33% vs 10%), B*50 (20% vs 10%), B*55 (20% vs 10%), DRB1*04 (40% vs 20%) and DRB1*11 (53.33% vs 30%) but the difference was only statically significant in A*24 allele (P=0.027; odd ratio=10.286). A*24 was also more prevalent in all patients than the general population in Iran. A*24 was the only allele more prevalent in severe COVID-19 cases with statistical significance. This allele was reported to be a risk factor for such autoimmune diseases as type 1 diabetes, myasthenia gravis, and systemic lupus erythematosus, which may be related to reported immune system hyperresponsiveness in severe COVID-19 cases.
Keywords :
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID , 19) , Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS , CoV , 2) , Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)
Journal title :
Acta Medica Iranica
Journal title :
Acta Medica Iranica
Record number :
2668644
Link To Document :
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