ORAI1 Genetic Polymorphism and its Correlation with Erythropoietin Resistance, Hemoglobin, and Erythropoietin Serum Level in Iraqi Patients with Chronic Renal Failure on Hemodialysis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62472/kjps.v14.i23.74-83الكلمات المفتاحية:
Chronic renal failure، ORAI1، Genetic polymorphism، Hemoglobin، Erythropoietin resistance، Hemodialysisالملخص
Introduction: Chronic renal failure CRF is a widespread, irreversible disease that develops gradually and is classified into five stages depending on the glomerular filtration rate GFR. Anemia is a considerable complication of CRF that becomes serious as GFR decreases, erythropoietin-stimulating agent ESA is used for treating anemia, but the resistance to it stands against its goal in many patients. Studying the genetic polymorphism in one of the erythropoietin-activated pathway store-operated calcium channels SOCs gene is a trial for investigating the cause of resistance.
Method: In this study, 174 subjects were included. Among 112 hemodialysis patients with CRF, 54.5% were non-responders, and the enrolled participants ranged from 20 to 79 years; a single nucleotide polymorphism in the ORAI1 gene was selected. Genotyping was done using an allele-specific polymerase chain reaction technique, and the data was analyzed through the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences.
Results: The results showed that hemoglobin levels differ significantly between the genetic groups, while erythropoietin levels showed no significant variation.
Conclusion: ORAI1 genetic polymorphism has no significant role in erythropoietin resistance in Iraqi hemodialysis patients with CRF, but this genetic variation significantly affects hemoglobin levels, depending on this study.