Gene behind severe skin reaction to common epilepsy drug identified
March 24th, 2011 - 6:20 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Mar 24 (ANI): Researchers have identified a gene responsible for severe skin reaction to a common epilepsy drug.
Carbamazepine is commonly used to treat patients with epilepsy and other diseases such as depression and trigeminal neuralgia.
Although successful in treating the majority of patients, it can cause side-effects that range from a mild skin irritation to severe blistering of the whole body.
Taiwanese researchers had earlier identified a gene that predisposes Asian patients to the skin condition. However, the gene could not predict the reaction in Caucasian people.
Scientists from the University of Liverpool, in collaboration with the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, screened more than a million variants in DNA across the human genome to understand why some patients are more prone to the drug’s side-effects than others.
They found the gene, called HLA-A*3101, increases the risk of developing a reaction to the drug from 5 percent to 26 percent in Caucasian patients.
Researchers are now working with clinicians and drug regulators to investigate how these new findings can translate into clinical practice.
“For the first time we have found a significant link between the drug and the skin condition in Caucasian people that also complements the findings in Asian patients. We can now begin to work with clinicians and regulators to maximise the benefits of the drug and minimise the side-effects,” said Prof Munir Pirmohamed. (ANI)
- 'Penicillin' breakthrough in cancer treatment? - Sep 15, 2010
- Gene behind fatal brain disorder isolated - Dec 27, 2011
- California scientists hail 'penicillin moment' in cancer treatment - Sep 15, 2010
- Study sheds new light on the causes of chronic liver cirrhosis - Mar 14, 2011
- 'Epilepsy is disabling, needs understanding' (March 26 is World Epilepsy Day) - Mar 25, 2012
- Discovery to help minimise drugs' side-effects - Dec 21, 2011
- Mild electric shocks could help ease your blues - Oct 12, 2010
- Stem cells from skin, blood regenerate faltering liver - May 12, 2011
- New procedure busts deadly brain tumour cells - Feb 06, 2012
- 'Gene fix' to treat depression - Oct 22, 2010
- Scientists stumble upon 'stop cancer' gene - Nov 16, 2011
- Five out of six new drugs don't work - Aug 18, 2010
- Nano drug delivery to eliminate transplant failures - Jan 27, 2012
- India-origin scientist's findings may hold key to novel malaria vaccines - Oct 22, 2010
- Cure cancer in just two hours - Jan 06, 2012
Tags: asian patients, blistering, carbamazepine, caucasian patients, clinicians, depression, diseases, dna, epilepsy, human genome, munir, neuralgia, regulators, skin condition, skin irritation, skin reaction, university of liverpool, variants, wellcome trust sanger, wellcome trust sanger institute