A low-cost, sensitive and specific PCR-based tool for rapid clinical detection of HLA-B*35 alleles associated with delayed drug hypersensitivity reactions

HLA. 2022 Dec;100(6):610-616. doi: 10.1111/tan.14767. Epub 2022 Aug 26.

Abstract

HLA (HLA) alleles are risk factors for CD8+ T-cell-mediated drug hypersensitivity reactions. However, as most HLA associations are incompletely predictive and/or involve risk alleles at low frequency, costly sequence-based typing can elude an economically productive cost: benefit ratio for clinical validation studies and diagnostic and/or preventative screening. Hence rapid and low-cost detection assays are now required, both for single alleles but also across risk loci associated with broader multi-disease risk; exemplified by associations with diverse alleles in HLA-B*35, including HLA-B*35:01 and green tea- or co-trimoxazole-induced liver injury. Here, we developed a cost-effective (<$10USD) qPCR assay for rapid (<2.5 h) clinical detection of HLA-B*35 alleles. The assay was validated using 430 DNA samples with previous American society for histocompatibility and immunogenetics-accredited sequence-based high-resolution HLA typing, positively detecting all HLA-B*35 allelic variants in our cohort, and as expected by primer design, the six samples that expressed low-frequency B*78:01. The assay did not result in positive detection for any negative control allele. With expected detection of B*35 and B*78, our assay sensitivity (95% CI, 95.07%-100.00%) and specificity (95% CI, 98.97%-100.00%) of 100% using as low as 10 ng of DNA provides a reliable HLA-B*35 screening tool for clinical validation and HLA-risk-based prevention and diagnostics.

Keywords: HLA (HLA); Immunogenetics; drug hypersensitivity reactions; real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Alleles
  • DNA / genetics
  • Drug Hypersensitivity* / diagnosis
  • Drug Hypersensitivity* / genetics
  • HLA-B Antigens* / genetics
  • Humans
  • Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction

Substances

  • HLA-B Antigens
  • DNA