Literature DB >> 16305372

Challenges in current drug delivery from the potential application of pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine in clinical practice.

Ioannis S Vizirianakis1.   

Abstract

The recent technological achievements in biotechnology and recombinant DNA technology have provided multiple new methods, molecular targets, and DNA-based diagnostics to pharmaceutical research that can be utilized in assays for screening and developing potential biotechnology-based drugs, as well as in biomedicine, health and pharmaceutical care. Furthermore, such advances opened up new opportunities by applying genetic information data in pharmacotherapy and drug delivery, thus ensuring better drug efficacy and safety in clinical practice. Now the concepts of personalized medicine and pharmacogenomics are likely improving the area of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics, since they favor differentiation of the conventional clinical diagnosis and drug selection into separate molecular subtypes of individuals belonging within a group of patients suffering from the same disease. Genetic polymorphisms have already been detected and analyzed in genes encoding drug-metabolizing enzymes, transporters as well as targets (e.g. receptors). The potential of applying genotyping and haplotyping analysis in future pharmaceutical care could eventually lead to pharmacotyping, i.e. individualized drug delivery profiling based on genetic-bioinformatic data in routine patient care. However, the steps towards this direction of drug delivery in clinical practice still have a long way to go to be fully achieved; until then, the critical evaluation of all available clinical data including pharmacodynamic, pharmacokinetic and genomic must be assessed for ensuring drug efficacy and safety. In this way, there has been great progress in elucidating genetic determinants contributing to the observed interindividual differences in drug disposition and effects, thus implementing current drug delivery with molecular genetics and diagnostics.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 16305372     DOI: 10.2174/1567201043480009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Drug Deliv        ISSN: 1567-2018            Impact factor:   2.565


  3 in total

Review 1.  Clinical translation of genotyping and haplotyping data: implementation of in vivo pharmacology experience leading drug prescription to pharmacotyping.

Authors:  Ioannis S Vizirianakis
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 6.447

Review 2.  The evolving role of drug metabolism in drug discovery and development.

Authors:  Lilian G Yengi; Louis Leung; John Kao
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2007-03-01       Impact factor: 4.580

3.  The GEnetic Syntax Score: a genetic risk assessment implementation tool grading the complexity of coronary artery disease-rationale and design of the GESS study.

Authors:  Ioannis S Vizirianakis; Fani Chatzopoulou; Andreas S Papazoglou; Efstratios Karagiannidis; Georgios Sofidis; Nikolaos Stalikas; Christos Stefopoulos; Konstantinos A Kyritsis; Nikolaos Mittas; Nikoleta F Theodoroula; Aggeliki Lampri; Eleni Mezarli; Anastasios Kartas; Dimitrios Chatzidimitriou; Anna Papa-Konidari; Eleftherios Angelis; Ηaralambos Karvounis; Georgios Sianos
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 2.298

  3 in total

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