| Literature DB >> 25206309 |
Noura S Abul-Husn1, Aniwaa Owusu Obeng2, Saskia C Sanderson1, Omri Gottesman3, Stuart A Scott1.
Abstract
Clinical genetic testing began over 30 years ago with the availability of mutation detection for sickle cell disease diagnosis. Since then, the field has dramatically transformed to include gene sequencing, high-throughput targeted genotyping, prenatal mutation detection, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, population-based carrier screening, and now genome-wide analyses using microarrays and next-generation sequencing. Despite these significant advances in molecular technologies and testing capabilities, clinical genetics laboratories historically have been centered on mutation detection for Mendelian disorders. However, the ongoing identification of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequence variants associated with common diseases prompted the availability of testing for personal disease risk estimation, and created commercial opportunities for direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies that assay these variants. This germline genetic risk, in conjunction with other clinical, family, and demographic variables, are the key components of the personalized medicine paradigm, which aims to apply personal genomic and other relevant data into a patient's clinical assessment to more precisely guide medical management. However, genetic testing for disease risk estimation is an ongoing topic of debate, largely due to inconsistencies in the results, concerns over clinical validity and utility, and the variable mode of delivery when returning genetic results to patients in the absence of traditional counseling. A related class of genetic testing with analogous issues of clinical utility and acceptance is pharmacogenetic testing, which interrogates sequence variants implicated in interindividual drug response variability. Although clinical pharmacogenetic testing has not previously been widely adopted, advances in rapid turnaround time genetic testing technology and the recent implementation of preemptive genotyping programs at selected medical centers suggest that personalized medicine through pharmacogenetics is now a reality. This review aims to summarize the current state of implementing genetic testing for personalized medicine, with an emphasis on clinical pharmacogenetic testing.Entities:
Keywords: direct-to-consumer genetic testing; implementation; personalized medicine; pharmacogenetics; pharmacogenomics; point-of-care genetic testing; preemptive genetic testing
Year: 2014 PMID: 25206309 PMCID: PMC4157398 DOI: 10.2147/PGPM.S48887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmgenomics Pers Med ISSN: 1178-7066
Candidate genes for pharmacogenetic implementation with available practice guidelines and recommendation statements
| Gene(s) | Drug | Organization | Practice guidelines/recommendation statements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ivacaftor | CPIC | Clancy et al; 2014 | |
| Warfarin | ACMG | Flockhart et al; 2008 | |
| CPIC | Johnson et al; 2011 | ||
| Clopidogrel | CPIC | Scott et al; 2011, | |
| ACCF/AHA | Holmes et al; 2010 | ||
| TCAs | CPIC | Hicks et al; 2013 | |
| Codeine | CPIC | Crews et al; 2012 | |
| SSRIs | CPIC | In preparation; 2014 | |
| EGAPP | EGAPP Working Group; 2007 | ||
| Tamoxifen | ACMG | Lyon et al; 2012 | |
| TCAs | CPIC | Hicks et al; 2013 | |
| Tacrolimus | CPIC | In preparation; 2014 | |
| Fluoropyrimidine | CPIC | Caudle et al; 2013 | |
| Abacavir | CPIC | Martin et al; 2012 | |
| Allopurinal | CPIC | Hershfield et al; 2013 | |
| Carbamazepine | CPIC | Leckband et al; 2013 | |
| Phenytoin | CPIC | In preparation; 2014 | |
| Interferon-α | CPIC | Muir et al; 2014 | |
| Simvastatin | CPIC | Wilke et al; 2012 | |
| Azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine | CPIC | Relling et al; 2011, | |
| Irinotecan | EGAPP | EGAPP Working Group; 2009 | |
| Multiple (eleven genes) | Multiple (53 drugs) | KNMP-PWG | Swen et al; 2011 |
Note:
Based on information available from Pharmacogenomics Knowledge Base website (http://www.pharmgkb.org/cpic/pairs), and K Caudle, CPIC Coordinator, personal communication.
Abbreviations: TCA, tricyclic antidepressants; SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; ACCF, American College of Cardiology Foundation; ACMG, American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics; AHA, American Heart Association; CPIC, Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium; EGAPP, Evaluation of Genomic Applications in Practice and Prevention; KNMP-PWG, Royal Dutch Association for the Advancement of Pharmacy-Pharmacogenetics Working Group.
Pharmacogenetic tests approved by the US FDA for IVD usea
| Gene(s) | Assay | Alleles interrogated | Company | Date approved |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verigene® Warfarin | Nanosphere, Inc. | September 2007 | ||
| INFINITI® Warfarin Assay | AutoGenomics, Inc. | January 2008 | ||
| eSensor® Warfarin | GenMark Diagnostics, Inc. | July 2008; December 2011 | ||
| eQ-PCR™ LC Warfarin | TrimGen Corporation | February 2009 | ||
| AmpliChip® CYP450 Test | Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd | January 2005 | ||
| INFINITI® CYP2C19 Assay | AutoGenomics, Inc. | October 2010 | ||
| Verigene®
| Nanosphere, Inc. | November 2012 | ||
| Spartan RX CYP2C19 Assay | Spartan Bioscience Inc. | August 2013 | ||
| xTAG® CYP2C19 Kit v3 | Luminex Molecular Diagnostics, Inc. | September 2013 | ||
| AmpliChip® CYP450 Test | Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd | January 2005 | ||
| xTAG® CYP2D6 Kit v3 | Luminex Molecular Diagnostics, Inc. | May 2013 |
Notes:
As listed on the US FDA IVD Product Database: http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/ProductsandMedicalProcedures/InVitroDiagnostics/default.htm
the CYP2D6 star (*) allele nomenclature for the AmpliChip® is based on the available nomenclature at the time of product release. The *41 allele reported by the AmpliChip® is not consistent with the current *41 haplotype nomenclature as it does not interrogate the 2988G>A variant that was discovered after the development of the Amplichip®.135
Abbreviations: FDA, Food and Drug Administration; IVD, in vitro diagnostic.