Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8472107 | Immunobiology | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
SNP genotyping results were successfully obtained from a total of 350 subjects including 166 individuals with SSc and 184 healthy controls. Although analysis tests did not show any significant associations between the SNPs under study and susceptibility to SSc, the occurrence of FOXP3 rs2294020 in female patients was associated with decreased time to progression from early to definite SSc (allelic model: HR = 1.43; CI = 1.03-1.99; p = 0.03; dominant model: HR = 1.54; CI = 1.04-2.28; p = 0.03). The inclusion of presence of ACA autoantibodies in the model did not significantly change the estimates. No conclusions can be drawn for the susceptibility to the disease or the time to progression in men due to the low statistical power. This study provides evidence of the association of rs2294020 with SSc evolution in female patients, modulating the time of progression from the diagnosis of early SSc to the diagnosis of definite SSc, while no effect on SSc susceptibility per se was found. rs2294020 may be considered a disease-modifying gene-variant rather than a disease-susceptibility SNP in SSc.
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Authors
Fabio D'Amico, Giovanni Fiorito, Evangelia Skarmoutsou, Mariagrazia Granata, Giulio A. Rossi, Chiara Trovato, Chiara Bellocchi, Maurizio Marchini, Lorenzo Beretta, Maria Clorinda Mazzarino,