Literature DB >> 10636440

Pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics: why is this relevant to the clinical geneticist?

D W Nebert1.   

Abstract

Adverse drug reactions, due at least in part to interindividual variability in drug response, rank between the 4th and 6th leading causes of death in the USA. The field of 'pharmacogenetics', which is 'the study of variability in drug response due to heredity', should help in reducing drug-caused morbidity and mortality. The recently coined term 'pharmacogenomics' usually refers to 'the field of new drug development based on our rapidly increasing knowledge of all genes in the human genome'. However, the two terms - pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics - are often used interchangeably. A classification of more than five dozen pharmacogenetic differences is presented here. Most of these variations occur in drug-metabolizing enzyme (DME) genes, with some presumed to exist in the DME receptor and drug transporter genes, and others have not yet been explained on a molecular basis. A method for unequivocally defining a quantitative phenotype (drug efficacy, toxicity, etc.) is proposed; this is where help from the clinical geneticist can be especially important. Our current appreciation of the degree of variability (including single-nucleotide polymorphisms, SNPs) in the human genome is described, with emphasis on the need to prove that a particular genotype is indeed the cause of a specific phenotype; this topic has been termed 'functional genomics'. Furthermore, the current amount of admixture amongst almost all ethnic groups will obviously make studies of gene-drug interactions more complicated, as will the withholding of ethnic information about DNA samples during any molecular epidemiologic study. DME genes and DME receptor and drug transporter genes can be regarded as 'modifier genes', because they influence disorders as diverse as risk of cancer, bone marrow toxicity resulting from occupational exposure, and Parkinson's disease; for this reason, the clinical geneticist, as well as the medical genetics counselor, should be knowledgeable in the rapidly expanding fields of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10636440     DOI: 10.1034/j.1399-0004.1999.560401.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Genet        ISSN: 0009-9163            Impact factor:   4.438


  40 in total

1.  High-throughput SNP genotyping by allele-specific PCR with universal energy-transfer-labeled primers.

Authors:  M V Myakishev; Y Khripin; S Hu; D H Hamer
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 9.043

2.  Pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics.

Authors:  M Pirmohamed
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.335

Review 3.  Ethical reflections on pharmacogenetics and DNA banking in a cohort of HIV-infected patients.

Authors:  Sandrine de Montgolfier; Grégoire Moutel; Nathalie Duchange; Ioannis Theodorou; Christian Hervé; Catherine Leport
Journal:  Pharmacogenetics       Date:  2002-12

4.  Pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics: recent developments, their clinical relevance and some ethical, social, and legal implications.

Authors:  Paul W Norbert; Allen D Roses
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 4.599

5.  AAPS/RAPS/CAPRA collaborative program: exploring the challenges of drug regulation in a global environment: clinical concerns.

Authors:  Marilyn N Martinez; Iain McGilveray
Journal:  AAPS PharmSci       Date:  2003-10-23

6.  Inference from the relationships between linkage disequilibrium and allele frequency distributions of 240 candidate SNPs in 109 drug-related genes in four Asian populations.

Authors:  Pei-Chieng Cha; Ryo Yamada; Akihiro Sekine; Yusuke Nakamura; Chong-Lek Koh
Journal:  J Hum Genet       Date:  2004-09-11       Impact factor: 3.172

7.  High-throughput single-base mismatch detection for genotyping of UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT1A1) with probe capture assay coupled with modified allele-specific primer extension reaction (MASPER).

Authors:  Osamu Kisaki; Seiji Kato; Kohei Shinohara; Hisahide Hiura; Tomohiro Samori; Hiroshi Sato
Journal:  J Clin Lab Anal       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 2.352

8.  Biomarkers for antiepileptic drug response.

Authors:  Tracy A Glauser
Journal:  Biomark Med       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 2.851

Review 9.  Pharmacogenomics and systems biology of membrane transporters.

Authors:  Qing Yan
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 2.695

10.  Risk assessment and communication tools for genotype associations with multifactorial phenotypes: the concept of "edge effect" and cultivating an ethical bridge between omics innovations and society.

Authors:  Vural Ozdemir; Guilherme Suarez-Kurtz; Raphaëlle Stenne; Andrew A Somogyi; Toshiyuki Someya; S Oğuz Kayaalp; Eugene Kolker
Journal:  OMICS       Date:  2009-02
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