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  • Title: Association between TNF-alpha promoter polymorphism and Helicobacter pylori cagA subtype infection.
    Author: Yea SS, Yang YI, Jang WH, Lee YJ, Bae HS, Paik KH.
    Journal: J Clin Pathol; 2001 Sep; 54(9):703-6. PubMed ID: 11533078.
    Abstract:
    AIMS: To assess the importance of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) promoter polymorphism in relation to infection with the cytotoxin associated gene A (cagA) subtype of Helicobacter pylori within a dyspeptic Korean population. METHODS: Eighty three patients with gastric disease and 113 healthy controls were studied. The DNA from gastric biopsy specimens was analysed by H pylori specific and cagA specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR). To characterise TNF-alpha polymorphism at positions -308 and -238, PCR based restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis was performed. RESULTS: Helicobacter pylori infection was closely correlated with G to A transition at position -308 of the TNF-alpha promoter when compared with healthy controls (odds ratio (OR), 2.912; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.082 to 7.836; p = 0.034). Although TNF-alpha -308 polymorphism in patients with H pylori was not significantly different from that in patients without H pylori, the -308A polymorphism was strongly associated with H pylori cagA subtype infection when compared with the polymorphism in cagA negative H pylori infection (OR, 8.757; 95% CI, 1.413 to 54.262; p = 0.019) and healthy controls (OR, 3.683; 95% CI, 1.343 to 10.101; p = 0.011). G to A genetic change at position -238 of the TNF-alpha gene was not significantly associated with H pylori cagA subtype infection. In addition, genetic polymorphisms at both sites of the TNF-alpha promoter in patients with H pylori infection did not correlate with the severity of disease. CONCLUSION: TNF-alpha -308A polymorphism was significantly related to infection with the H pylori cagA subtype in Korean patients with gastric disease.
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