Class I and Class II HLA antigens were tested in patients treated for thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura or hemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP/HUS) to determine whether there is a disease association. Based on the results of a pilot trial, retrospective HLA-typing of 18 patients with a diagnosis of TTP/HUS and prospective typing of 12 newly diagnosed patients with TTP/HUS were performed. Twenty-one patients were non-Hispanic Caucasians, 7 were African-Americans, and 2 were Hispanic-Caucasians. Of 30 patients tested, 28 were positive for DR52 (chi-squared = 5.14, P < 0.05), and only two were positive for DR53 compared to 57% of controls (chi-squared = 18.5, P < 0.0005). Diverse DR52 subtypes (DRB3*0101, DRB3*02, and DRB3*0301) were found by oligonucleotide testing in 15 patients, suggesting the association was not with DR52 but with absence of the DR53 antigen. The 2 patients with DR53 were not homozygous. This study suggests that the supertypic antigen, DR53, may govern susceptibility to TTP/HUS, since the relative risk of this disease among DR53 positives is reduced at 0.09 (95% confidence interval, 0.01-0.28). This finding indicates a possible immunogenetic component in the pathogenesis of TTP.