| Literature DB >> 27312955 |
J Kevin Hicks1,2, David Stowe1, Marc A Willner1, Maya Wai1, Thomas Daly3, Steven M Gordon4, Bret A Lashner5, Sumit Parikh6, Robert White7, Kathryn Teng8, Timothy Moss2, Angelika Erwin2, Jeffrey Chalmers1, Charis Eng2, Scott Knoer1.
Abstract
The number of clinically relevant gene-based guidelines and recommendations pertaining to drug prescribing continues to grow. Incorporating gene-drug interaction information into the drug-prescribing process can help optimize pharmacotherapy outcomes and improve patient safety. However, pharmacogenomic implementation barriers exist such as integration of pharmacogenomic results into electronic health records (EHRs), development and deployment of pharmacogenomic decision support tools to EHRs, and feasible models for establishing ambulatory pharmacogenomic clinics. We describe the development of pharmacist-managed pharmacogenomic services within a large health system. The Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium guidelines for HLA-B*57:01-abacavir, HLA-B*15:02-carbamazepine, and TPMT-thiopurines (i.e., azathioprine, mercaptopurine, and thioguanine) were systematically integrated into patient care. Sixty-three custom rules and alerts (20 for TPMT-thiopurines, 8 for HLA-B*57:01-abacavir, and 35 for HLA-B*15:02-anticonvulsants) were developed and deployed to the EHR for the purpose of providing point-of-care pharmacogenomic decision support. In addition, a pharmacist and physician-geneticist collaboration established a pharmacogenomics ambulatory clinic. This clinic provides genetic testing when warranted, result interpretation along with pharmacotherapy recommendations, and patient education. Our processes for developing these pharmacogenomic services and solutions for addressing implementation barriers are presented.Entities:
Keywords: clinical decision support; implementation; personalized medicine; pharmacogenomics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27312955 DOI: 10.1002/phar.1786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacotherapy ISSN: 0277-0008 Impact factor: 4.705