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Environmental factors could adjust risk of eosinophilic esophagitis in people with particular gene variants

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center News Oct 22, 2017

In a recent study published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology researchers discovered that the risk of developing eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), in people with two gene variants associated with developing the disease, could potentially be modified by certain environmental exposures.

The study, “Early-life environmental exposures interact with genetic susceptibility variants in pediatric patients with eosinophilic esophagitis,” suggested that people with gene variants in CAPN14 or LOC283710/KLF13 who were breastfed or admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit were significantly more or less likely to develop the disease.

Notably, people with a gene variant in the CAPN14 gene who were breastfed were 92 percent less likely to develop EoE compared to patients who had the gene variant but were not breastfed.

"While the underlying mechanism for how breastfeeding and CAPN14 may interact and protect against EoE is unknown, CAPN14 is associated with barrier function in the gut. Thus, breastmilk, in the setting of altered barrier function, may be critical to disease prevention," said lead author Elizabeth T. Jensen, MPH, PhD.

The study also suggests that admittance into a neonatal intensive care unit can significantly increase the odds of developing EoE in people with a gene variant at LOC283710/KLF13.

“The evidence is preliminary, but further understanding of these interactions could provide an opportunity to alter the development of EoE, as some environmental factors can be modified in individuals harboring specific genetic variants.” said Jensen.

The study followed 127 subjects with EoE and 121 control subjects, all of whom were recruited from the Cincinnati Center for Eosinophilic Disorders at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Subjects with and without EoE were all under the age of 18 at time of enrollment and were self-reported Caucasian. They all had a DNA sample taken and their mothers were asked to fill out a questionnaire describing early life experiences.

Cincinnati Children's Marc E. Rothenberg, MD, PhD, was a corresponding author on this study.
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