Author: Poulton, Kay; Wright, Paul; Hughes, Pamela; Savic, Sinisa; Welberry Smith, Matthew; Guiver, Malcolm; Morton, Muir; van Dellen, David; Tholouli, Eleni; Wynn, Robert; Clark, Brendan
Title: A role for human leucocyte antigens in the susceptibility to SARSâ€Covâ€2 infection observed in transplant patients Cord-id: z3t7plvh Document date: 2020_7_5
ID: z3t7plvh
Snippet: We analysed data from 80 patients who tested positive for SARSâ€CoVâ€2 RNA who had previously been HLA typed to support transplantation. Data were combined from two adjacent centres in Manchester and Leeds to achieve a sufficient number for early analysis. HLA frequencies observed were compared against two control populations: first, against published frequencies in a UK deceased donor population (n = 10,000) representing the target population of the virus, and second, using a cohort of indivi
Document: We analysed data from 80 patients who tested positive for SARSâ€CoVâ€2 RNA who had previously been HLA typed to support transplantation. Data were combined from two adjacent centres in Manchester and Leeds to achieve a sufficient number for early analysis. HLA frequencies observed were compared against two control populations: first, against published frequencies in a UK deceased donor population (n = 10,000) representing the target population of the virus, and second, using a cohort of individuals from the combined transplant waiting lists of both centres (n = 308), representing a comparator group of unaffected individuals of the same demographic. We report a significant HLA association with HLA†DQB1*06 (53% vs. 36%; p < .012; OR 1.96; 95% CI 1.94–3.22) and infection. A bias towards an increased representation of HLAâ€A*26, HLAâ€DRB1*15, HLAâ€DRB1*10 and DRB1*11 was also noted but these were either only significant using the UK donor controls, or did not remain significant after correction for multiple tests. Likewise, HLAâ€A*02, HLAâ€B*44 and HLAâ€C*05 may exert a protective effect, but these associations did not remain significant after correction for multiple tests. This is relevant information for the clinical management of patients in the setting of the current SARSâ€CoVâ€2 pandemic and potentially in riskâ€assessing staff interactions with infected patients.
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