Abstract
We genotyped 224 patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and 1056 healthy controls and related the risk for HL and outcome of chemotherapy treatment to polymorphisms in genes encoding interleukins and metabolizing enzymes by capillary electrophoresis. Patients with the UGT1A1 TA tandem repeat TA6/6 genotype had a poorer overall survival (OS) (relative risk [RR] 3.63, p = 0.004), and patients above 40 years with the GSTA1 AA genotype had poorer event-free survival (EFS) (RR 4.38, p = 0.003) after chemotherapy. In patients above 40 years, the IL-10 rs1800890 T-allele was associated with lower risk for HL (TT genotype vs. AA, odds ratio [OR] 0.38 [95% confidence interval 0.21–0.69], p = 0.001; AT/TT combined genotypes vs. AA, OR 0.45 [0.27–0.74], p = 0.001). The GSTP1 rs1695 A-allele reduced the risk for HL (GG vs. AG, OR 0.64 [0.42–0.99], p = 0.04; GG vs. AG/AA combined genotypes, OR 0.70 [0.47–1.04], p = 0.07), and the GSTT1 deleted genotype increased the risk for HL (OR 3.17 [1.97–5.09], p < 0.001) regardless of age.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Jennifer Kerr for updating the clinical database and Annette T. Kristensen for laboratory support.
Potential conflict of interest
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