The objective of the study was to examine the relationship
between HLA genotypes and disease severity as measured by brain
MRI quantitative markers of demyelinating and destructive
pathology in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). We studied
100 patients with MS and 122 age, sex-, ethnic- and
residence-matched controls. The DNA extraction and the genomic
typing (A, B, DRB1 and DQB1 loci) were obtained with
sequence-specific oligonucleotide method, using a commercially
available reversible line blot assay (INNO-LIPA). All patients
underwent a 1.5 tesla MRI examination of the brain. Disease
severity was assessed by clinical (Expanded Disability Status
Scale (EDSS)) and MRI (T2- and T1-lesion load (LL) and brain
parenchymal fraction (BPF)) outcome measures. HLA-DQB1* 02 (OR
19.9, 95% C. I. 16.2–24.3, uncorrected (uncorr)- p<0.00001,
corr-p<0.0006), -DQB1*03 (OR 16.8, 95% C. I. 13.6–20.5,
uncorr-p<0.00001, corrp< 0.0006), -DRB1*15 (OR 4.6, 95% C.
I. 3.7–5.6, uncorrp= 0.0001, corr-p=0.006), and -DRB1*03 (OR
3.9, 95% C. I. 3.2–4.8, uncorr-p=0.0001, corrp= 0.006) alleles
were associated with MS. T2-, T1-LL, BPF and EDSS were not
significantly different according to the carrier status of these
HLA alleles. No differences were found in the ratios of disease
severity/disease duration according to the HLA car rier status.
Multiple regression analysis showed that a higher T2-LL was
associated with the presence of DRB1*04 (uncorr- R2=0.15,
p=0.006 and corr- R2=0.11, p=0.025) and B7 alleles
(uncorr-R2=0.08, p=0.02 and corr-R2=0.07, p=0.018), T1-LL was
associated with B7 (uncorr- R2=0.30, p<0.0001 and corr-
R2=0.27, p=0.0001) and DRB1*12 (uncorr-R2=0.25, p<0.0001 and
corr-R2=0.21, p=0.0002) alleles, whereas the BPF was predicted
only by the presence of DRB1*12 allele (uncorr-R2=0.24, p=0.002
and corr-R2=0.20, p=0.004). The study findings suggest that some
HLA alleles may predict the destructive pathological processes
visible on MRI. Since the size of the sample studied is
relatively small, further studies are needed to draw any firm
conclusion about genotype/phenotype correlation in patients with
MS.