| Literature DB >> 25775139 |
Silvia Vogl1, Roman W Lutz2, Gilbert Schönfelder3, Werner K Lutz4.
Abstract
Currently, genotyping of patients for polymorphic enzymes responsible for metabolic elimination is considered a possibility to adjust drug dose levels. For a patient to profit from this procedure, the interindividual differences in drug metabolism within one genotype should be smaller than those between different genotypes. We studied a large cohort of healthy young adults (283 subjects), correlating their CYP2C9 genotype to a simple phenotyping metric, using flurbiprofen as probe drug. Genotyping was conducted for CYP2C9*1, *2, *3. The urinary metabolic ratio MR (concentration of CYP2C9-dependent metabolite divided by concentration of flurbiprofen) determined two hours after flurbiprofen (8.75 mg) administration served as phenotyping metric. Linear statistical models correlating genotype and phenotype provided highly significant allele-specific MR estimates of 0.596 for the wild type allele CYP2C9*1, 0.405 for CYP2C9*2 (68 % of wild type), and 0.113 for CYP2C9*3 (19 % of wild type). If these estimates were used for flurbiprofen dose adjustment, taking 100 % for genotype *1/*1, an average reduction to 84 %, 60 %, 68 %, 43 %, and 19 % would result for genotype *1/*2, *1/*3, *2/*2, *2/*3, and *3/*3, respectively. Due to the large individual variation within genotypes with coefficients of variation ≥ 20 % and supposing the normal distribution, one in three individuals would be out of the average optimum dose by more than 20 %, one in 20 would be 40 % off. Whether this problem also applies to other CYPs and other drugs has to be investigated case by case. Our data for the given example, however, puts the benefit of individual drug dosing to question, if it is exclusively based on genotype.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25775139 PMCID: PMC4361569 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flurbiprofen metabolism.
A. Simplified metabolism of flurbiprofen in humans. B. FLB (R = H) and OHF (R = OH) acylglucuronides with positions of the glucuronic acid moiety.
CYP2C9 genotypes and respective measured and estimated metabolic ratios for flurbiprofen.
| MR Measured | MR Estimated | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genotype | Number/frequency | MR (mean ± SD) | Percent of wild type activity | MR (estimate ± SE) | Percent of wild type activity |
| CYP2C9*1/*1 | 181/64.0% | 1.189 ± 0.314 | = 100 | 1.192 ± 0.021 | = 100 |
| CYP2C9*1/*2 | 52/18.4% | 1.005 ± 0.202 | 85 | 1.001 ± 0.033 | 84 |
| CYP2C9*1/*3 | 39/13.8% | 0.728 ± 0.256 | 61 | 0.709 ± 0.041 | 60 |
| CYP2C9*2/*2 | 5/1.8% | 0.834 ± 0.284 | 70 | 0.810 ± 0.066 | 68 |
| CYP2C9*2/*3 | 5/1.8% | 0.424 ± 0.095 | 36 | 0.518 ± 0.052 | 43 |
| CYP2C9*3/*3 | 1/0.4% | 0.096 single value | 8 | 0.226 ± 0.084 | 19 |
Estimated allelic contributions: 0.596±0.010, 0.405±0.033, and 0.113±0.042 for CYP2C9*1, *2 and *3, respectively.
SD, standard deviation; SE, standard error; MR, metabolic ratio.
Fig 2Histograms.
Distribution of the metabolic ratio (MR; concentration of 4’-hydroxyflurbiprofen [OHF] divided by the concentration of flurbiprofen [FLB]) measured in urine 2 h after administration of flurbiprofen to 283 individuals. Histograms are shown for the entire study group and for the genotypes with more than one individual. One single individual with genotype CYP2C9*3/*3 showed an MR of 0.096 (highlighted by an arrow in the histogram). The dashed lines indicate the best estimates of model-derived MRs, together with the FLB dose adjustment in percent of wild type *1/*1 (= 100%).
Compound specific liquid chromatography/ mass spectrometry parameters for flurbiprofen (FLB), 4’-hydroxyflurbiprofen (OHF) and the respective deuterated internal standards FLB-d3 and OHF-d3.
| Compound | Transition | DP (V) | CE (V) | Retention time (min) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FLB | 243 → 199 | -26 | -10 | 8.1 |
| OHF | 259 → 215 | -16 | -12 | 7.7 |
| FLB-d3 | 246 → 202 | -21 | -12 | 8.1 |
| OHF-d3 | 262 → 218 | -21 | -12 | 7.7 |
DP, declustering potential; CE, collision energy.