Prevalencia de haplotipos HLA-DQ2 y DQ8 que predisponen a enfermedad celiaca en México
Author(s) -
María Esther Mejía-León,
Calderón de la Barca
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
revista de gastroenterología de méxico
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.27
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 2255-5528
pISSN - 0375-0906
DOI - 10.1016/j.rgmx.2018.06.005
Subject(s) - medicine
We have read the article ‘‘Is celiac disease better identified through HLA-DQ8 than through HLA-DQ2 in Mexican subjects?’’ by Cerda-Contreras et al. with interest, presented as the first exploratory study on the theme conducted in Mexico. The authors evaluated the frequency of those haplotypes in a group of 30 patients with celiac disease (CD) and 19 patients with other diagnoses associated with chronic diarrhea. We consider it pertinent to make a few comments. The results coincide with those we published in 2015, also in the Revista de Gastroenterología de México, in which, in addition to analyzing the distribution of those genetic variants in CD, we compared them with the allelic prevalence in the general population of Northwestern Mexico, calculating a genetic risk gradient associated with HLA for CD in the Mexican population. There is an elevated prevalence of DQ8 in Mexicans with CD. Cerda-Contreras et al. suggest that the HLA-DQ8 haplotype may identify patients with CD better than the HLA-DQ2 haplotype, due to the fact that in their sample, DQ8 was more frequent in the patients with CD than in those without the disease, whereas the difference was less for DQ2. We observed that the joint presence of the two haplotypes or the combination of DQ8 with the DQB1*0201 allele of DQ2, conferred the maximum risk for CD in our population and that did not occur with isolated DQ8. In addition, considering that the prevalence of both haplotypes was similar in the general population studied, it would be expected for the two haplotypes to contribute to genetic risk, and not mainly DQ2, as occurs in Europeans, or mainly DQ8, as would occur in populations with a greater prevalence of Amerindian genes. Furthermore, the typing of haplotypes should not be utilized as a strategy for making the differential diagnosis, given that although it has high sensitivity, its specificity is low. In adult patients, such as those in the study by Cerda-
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