Objective: Data on C-reactive protein (CRP) as a risk indicator of venous thromboembolism are conflicting. A recent study reported higher CRP levels in homozygous carriers of a novel CRP gene polymorphism at the 3' UTR (CRP +1444C>T). We investigated, whether homozygosity for CRP +1444C>T is associated with an increased risk of spontaneous venous thromboembolism (VTE).
Methods and results: CRP +1444C>T genotype and plasma levels were assessed in 128 patients with deep venous thrombosis (DVT, 70 females/58 males), 105 with pulmonary embolism (PE, 58 females/47 males) and 122 healthy individuals (60 females/62 males). CRP +1444TT was significantly associated with increased CRP plasma levels in healthy individuals. CRP +1444TT was more frequent (14%) among controls than DVT patients (9%, p=0.26) or PE patients (6%, p=0.05), respectively. No significant deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was observed in patients (p=0.8) or controls (p=0.3), respectively. CRP +1444C>T was not significantly associated with CRP levels in patients with VTE.
Conclusions: Homozygous carriers of the CRP 3' UTR +1444C>T polymorphism do not have a significantly increased risk of VTE. Our data support the assumption that a clinically relevant association between CRP and VTE is missing.