Context: The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) strongly contributes to the development of polyglandular autoimmunity (PGA).
Objective: To evaluate the impact of sex on human leukocyte antigen (HLA) association with PGA for the first time.
Design: Cross-sectional immunogenetic study.
Setting: Academic tertiary referral Orphan Disease Center for PGA (ORPHA 282196) and immunogenetics laboratory.
Subjects: Patients (158) with coexistent type 1 diabetes and autoimmune thyroid disease (adult type 3 PGA, ORPHA 227982) and 479 unrelated healthy controls.
Interventions: All 637 white subjects were typed for HLA-A, -B, -DRB1, -DQA1, and -DQB1 alleles at a two-field level.
Main outcome measures: Modification of the gene-disease association by sex.
Results: MHC class I HLA-A association was sex related to both the total white adult type 3 PGA collective (n = 158, P = 0.0065), as well as in PGA patients with autoimmune Hashimoto thyroiditis (n = 91, P = 0.010). Compared with HLA-A*02:01, A*11:01 was over-represented in male patients, yet under-represented in women (OR 1.49, 95% CI 0.55 to 3.88 vs 0.42, 0.12 to 1.17). A*24:02 was under-represented in male but not in female patients (OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.11 to 1.04 vs 1.19, 0.65 to 2.15). With the exclusion of the five most frequent alleles (A*01:01, A*02:01, A*03:01, A*11:01, and A*24:02), the sum of all other identified alleles was under-represented in male patients (OR 0.37, 0.18 to 0.72, P = 0.0046). The strong MHC HLA-B association with PGA (P < 0.0001) was not sex related (P = 0.55). Furthermore, no interaction with sex was observed for the MHC class II HLA-DRB1, -DQA1, and -DQB1 alleles.
Conclusion: MHC class I HLA-A association with type 3 PGA is significantly affected by sex.
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