Imatinib-induced ophthalmological side-effects in GIST patients are associated with the variations of EGFR, SLC22A1, SLC22A5 and ABCB1

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Abstract

Imatinib-induced ophthalmological side-effects, including conjunctiva hemorrhage and periorbital oedema, although very common and still remain relatively little understood. The present study investigated the effects of genetic polymorphisms of drug targets and membrane transporters on these side effects. We found that the minor allele of EGFR rs10258429 and SLC22A1 rs683369 were significant risk determinants of conjunctival hemorrhage with OR of 7.061 (95%CI = 1.791-27.837, P = 0.005 for EGFR rs10258429 CT +TT vs CC), and 4.809 (95%CI = 1.267-18.431, P = 0.021 for SLC22A1 rs683369 GG+CG vs CC). The minor allele of SLC22A5 rs274558 and ABCB1 rs2235040 were protective factors to periorbital oedema with OR of 0.313 (95%CI = 0.149-0.656, P = 0.002 for SLC22A5 rs274558 AA+AG vs GG), and 0.253 (95%CI = 0.079-0.805, P = 0.020 for ABCB1 rs2235040 CT vs CC). These results indicated that variants in EGFR, SLC22A1, SLC22A5 and ABCB1 influenced the incidence of Imatinib-induced ophthalmological toxicities, and polymorphism analyses in associated genes might be beneficial to optimize Imatinib treatment.

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Qiu, H. B., Zhuang, W., Wu, T., Xin, S., Lin, C. Z., Ruan, H. L., … Wang, X. D. (2018). Imatinib-induced ophthalmological side-effects in GIST patients are associated with the variations of EGFR, SLC22A1, SLC22A5 and ABCB1. Pharmacogenomics Journal, 18(3), 460–466. https://doi.org/10.1038/tpj.2017.40

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