| Literature DB >> 27713321 |
Richard Peck1, Patrick Smith2.
Abstract
Prescribers have been practicing stratified medicine for many years. Patient characteristics, usually non-genetic, including age, comorbidities and concomitant medications are taken into account when deciding which drug to prescribe. In addition, the majority of drugs require dose adjustments across patient subgroups, usually determined by non-genetic differences between the subgroups. Whilst pharmacogenetics hold promise for enhancing treatment stratification and even treatment individualisation, non-genetic factors will continue to be very important. Both non-genetic and genetic factors must be considered to improve understanding and quantification of the variability in treatment outcomes and to guide stratification and targeting of patient subgroups to the right drug and also to the right range of doses within that subgroup. Development of stratified medicines must consider non-genetic as well as genetic factors and, where appropriate, include stratification through optimising the dose for each patient or subgroup as well as by choosing the drug most likely to deliver efficacy to that patient or group.Entities:
Keywords: dose-finding; modeling; pharmacogenetics; response variability
Year: 2010 PMID: 27713321 PMCID: PMC4034001 DOI: 10.3390/ph3051637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1The relationship between dose and clinical effect. Drug exposures, C(t), determine where a given individual is on their own unique concentration-effect curve. Each individual will have one pharmacokinetic profile, and numerous pharmacodynamic profiles for on target and off-target effects. Sources of variability in both pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics which contribute to differences in response to drugs are listed.
Figure 2Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic variability and the utility of assessing a patient to individualise therapy. Therapies falling into quadrant I are unlikely to benefit from phenotypic or genotypic testing; Quadrants II and IV may benefit from a pharmacokinetic assessment (genetic or non-genetic) of drug metabolising enzymes or transporters; Quadrants III and IV may benefit from a pharmacodynamic assessment (genetic or non-genetic) to identify likelihood of clinical response. Controlling variability is more useful for drugs with a narrow therapeutic index. DM = Drug Metabolism/transporters; PK = Pharmacokinetics; PD = Pharmacodynamics.
Figure 3Omalizumab dosing algorithm.