HLA-B*58:01 screening to prevent allopurinol-induced severe cutaneous adverse reactions in Chinese patients with chronic kidney disease. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B*58:01 allele is a significant risk factor for allopurinol-induced severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs) which is potentially fatal. In some studies, chronic kidney disease (CKD) was also implicated to compound the risk of SCARs. We aim to investigate if pre-treatment HLA-B*58:01 screening can prevent allopurinol-induced SCARs in Chinese patients with CKD and its cost-effectiveness. We prospectively recruited Chinese CKD patients who required allopurinol during 2011-2015 and performed pre-treatment HLA testing (HLA screening group). Patients tested positive for HLA-B*58:01 were refrained from allopurinol while those tested negative were prescribed allopurinol. The incidence of SCARs in the HLA screening group was compared with the historical control in previous 5 years and the cost-effectiveness of HLA testing was analyzed. In the historical control (2006-2010), 3605 patients on allopurinol were screened, 22 out of 1027 (2.14%) CKD Chinese patients newly started on allopurinol developed SCARs, including 6 SJS/TEN. In the HLA screening group, 28 out of 192 patients (14.6%) tested HLA-B*58:01 positive were advised to avoid allopurinol; 156 out of 164 HLA-B*58:01-negative patients received allopurinol and none developed SCARs. The incidence rate of SCARs was significantly lower in the HLA screening group compared with controls (0% vs 2.14% respectively, p = 0.037*). The targeted HLA screening approach was associated with lower healthcare costs compared with no HLA screening (US$ 92,430 vs US$ 281,226). Pre-treatment HLA-B*58:01 screening is cost-effective to target on patients with CKD in Chinese to prevent allopurinol-induced SCARs.

publication date

  • July 2021