| Literature DB >> 27764192 |
Matthias Samwald1, Hong Xu1, Kathrin Blagec1, Philip E Empey2, Daniel C Malone3, Seid Mussa Ahmed4, Patrick Ryan5,6, Sebastian Hofer1, Richard D Boyce7.
Abstract
Pre-emptive pharmacogenomic (PGx) testing of a panel of genes may be easier to implement and more cost-effective than reactive pharmacogenomic testing if a sufficient number of medications are covered by a single test and future medication exposure can be anticipated. We analysed the incidence of exposure of individual patients in the United States to multiple drugs for which pharmacogenomic guidelines are available (PGx drugs) within a selected four-year period (2009-2012) in order to identify and quantify the incidence of pharmacotherapy in a nation-wide patient population that could be impacted by pre-emptive PGx testing based on currently available clinical guidelines. In total, 73 024 095 patient records from private insurance, Medicare Supplemental and Medicaid were included. Patients enrolled in Medicare Supplemental age > = 65 or Medicaid age 40-64 had the highest incidence of PGx drug use, with approximately half of the patients receiving at least one PGx drug during the 4 year period and one fourth to one third of patients receiving two or more PGx drugs. These data suggest that exposure to multiple PGx drugs is common and that it may be beneficial to implement wide-scale pre-emptive genomic testing. Future work should therefore concentrate on investigating the cost-effectiveness of multiplexed pre-emptive testing strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27764192 PMCID: PMC5072717 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Examples of health systems that have launched pharmacogenomics initiatives.
| Institution | Drug(s) | Gene(s) | Testing Approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vanderbilt University Medical Center [ | clopidogrel, simvastatin, warfarin, thiopurines, tacrolimus | CYP2C19, SLCO1B1, CYP2C9, VKORC1, TPMT, CYP3A5 | Genotyping panel (Illumina Veracode ADME) |
| St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital [ | thiopurines, codeine, oxycodone, tramadol, amitriptyline, ondansetron, fluoxetine, paroxetine, simavastatin, clopidogrel, tacrolimus, capecitabine, fluorouracil, atazanavir, irinotecan, belinostat | TPMT, CYP2D6, SLCO1B1, CYP2C19, CYP3A5, DPYD, UGT1A1 | Genotyping panel (Affymetrix DMET Plus) and a CYP2D6 copy number assay |
| University of Florida and Shands Hospital [ | clopidogrel, thiopurines, codeine, tramadol, peg-interferon alpha | CYP2C19, TPMT, CYP2D6, IFNL3 | Genotyping panel (Life Technologies Quant Studio OpenArray) and GenMark Dx (Carlsbad, CA) |
| University of Illinois at Chicago [ | Warfarin, clopidogrel | CYP2C9, VKORC1, CYP4F2, CYP2C19 | Genotyping panel (Genmark Dx eSensor) |
| Mayo Clinic [ | abacavir, carbamazepine, thiopurines, interferon, citalopram, clopidogrel, escitalopram, warfarin, codeine, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, tamoxifen, tramadol, venlafaxine, allopurinol, simvastatin | HLA-B, TPMT, IFNL3, CYP2C19, CYP2C9, VKORC1, CYP2D6, SLCO1B1 | PGRNseq |
| University of Maryland [ | clopidogrel | CYP2C19 | Gene-specific test (Nanosphere Verigene) |
| Mount Sinai Medical Center [ | Clopidogrel, warfarin, simvastatin, tricyclic antidepressants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors | CYP2C19, CYP2C9, VKORC1, SLCO1B1, CYP2D6 | PGRNSeq |
*CYP2C9: cytochrome P450 2C9, CYP2C19: cytochrome P450 2C19, CYP2D6: cytochrome P450 2D6, CYP4F2: cytochrome P450 4F2, SLCO1B1: solute carrier organic anion transporter 1B1, VKORC1: vitamin K epoxide reductase complex subunit 1, TPMT: thiopurine methyltransferase, HLA-B: major histocompatibility complex, class I, B, IFNL3: interferon, lambda 3.
Classification of potential clinical effects observed in patients with risk phenotypes, based on DPWG guidelines.
| Class | Clinical Effect |
|---|---|
| AA | Clinical effect (NS): no change or a non-significant change of clinical parameters. Kinetic effect (NS): no change or a non-significant change of kinetic parameters. |
| A | Minor clinical effect (S): QTc prolongation (<450 ms ♀, <470 ms ♂); QTc time increase < 60ms; INR increase < 4.5. Kinetic effect (S): significant change of kinetic parameters |
| B | Clinical effect (S): short-lived discomfort (< 48 hr) without permanent injury: e.g. reduced decrease in resting heart rate; reduction in exercise tachycardia; decreased pain relief from oxycodone; ADE resulting from increased bioavailability of atomoxetine (decreased appetite, insomnia, sleep disturbance, depressive mood, etc); neutropenia > 1.5x109/l; leucopenia > 3.0x109/l; thrombocytopenia > 75x109/l; moderate diarrhea not affecting daily activities; reduced glucose increase following oral glucose tolerance test; muscle complaints creatine kinase <3 times normal upper limit |
| C | Clinical effect (S): long-standing discomfort (48–168 hr) without permanent injury e.g. failure of therapy with tricyclic antidepressants, atypical antipsychotic drugs; extrapyramidal side effects; parkinsonism; ADE resulting from increased bioavailability of tricyclic antidepressants, metoprolol, propafenone (central effects e.g. dizziness); increased INR 4.5–6.0; neutropenia 1.0–1.5x109/l; leucopenia 2.0–3.0x109/l; thrombocytopenia 50-75x109/l; muscle complaints creatine kinase 3–10 times normal upper limit |
| D | Clinical effect (S): long-standing discomfort (> 168 hr), permanent symptom or invalidating injury e.g. failure of prophylaxis of atrial fibrillation; venous thromboembolism; decreased effect of clopidogrel on inhibition of platelet aggregation; ADE resulting from increased bioavailability of phenytoin; INR > 6.0; neutropenia 0.5–1.0x109/l; leucopenia 1.0–2.0x109/l; thrombocytopenia 25-50x109/l; severe diarrhea; myopathy (muscle complaints creatine kinase ≥10 times normal upper limit) |
| E | Clinical effect (S): Failure of lifesaving therapy e.g. anticipated myelosuppression; prevention of breast cancer relapse; arrhythmia; neutropenia < 0.5x109/l; leucopenia < 1.0x109/l; thrombocytopenia < 25x109/l; life-threatening complications from diarrhea; rhabdomyolysis |
| F | Clinical effect (S): death; arrhythmia; unanticipated myelosuppression |
ADE: Adverse Drug Event. DPWG: Dutch Pharmacogenetics Working Group. NS: not statistically significant difference. S: statistically significant difference. INR: international normalized ratio. QTc: Corrected QT interval.
Overview of drugs for which CPIC or DPWG guidelines were available at the time of our analysis (mid-2014).
Drugs and substances that we assigned to the ‘core list’ are listed separately. Only ‘core list’ substances were used for generating prescription statistics. Drug substances that were included in the estimation of the number of high-risk drug-phenotype co-occurrences are printed in bold.
| Gene | Substances associated with gene in pharmacogenomic guidelines |
|---|---|
| CYP2C19 | |
| CYP2C9 | warfarin |
| CYP2D6 | |
| CYP3A5 | tacrolimus |
| DPYD | capecitabine |
| TPMT | |
| UGT1A1 | irinotecan |
| SLCO1B1 | simvastatin |
| VKORC1 | warfarin |
| F5 | estrogen-containing oral contraceptives |
| HLA-B | abacavir |
| IFNL3 | peginterferon alfa-2a |
a: substance covered by CPIC guideline
b: substance covered by DPWG guideline. CPIC: Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium. DPWG: Dutch Pharmacogenetics Working Group.
Incidence of exposure to drugs for which pre-emptive pharmacogenomic testing is available.
| Characteristic | CCAE (age 0–13) | CCAE (age 14–39) | CCAE (age 40–64) | Medicaid (age 0–13) | Medicaid (age 14–39) | Medicaid (age 40–64) | Medicare (age > = 65) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | 9 893 962 | 22 824 848 | 26 561 525 | 4 151 506 | 3 032 191 | 1 130 797 | 5 429 266 |
| Female | 48.1% | 57.5% | 54.8% | 48.4% | 69.3% | 60.8% | 55.2% |
| Age (median, mean) | 6, 6.01 | 27, 26.3 | 51, 51.23 | 5, 5.14 | 21, 22.5 | 50, 50.57 | 72, 73.82 |
| > = 1 drugs | 11.2% (100.0%) | 30.4% (100.0%) | 42.2% (100.0%) | 14.0% (100.0%) | 40.2% (100.0%) | 55.5% (100.0%) | 50.6% (100.0%) |
| > = 2 drugs | 1.1% (9.9%) | 9.1% (30.0%) | 17.8% (42.2%) | 1.8% (12.1%) | 15.3% (38.1%) | 32.8% (59.0%) | 27.5% (54.4%) |
| > = 3 drugs | 0.2% (2.1%) | 3.1% (10.2%) | 7.5% (17.8%) | 0.5% (3.3%) | 6.5% (16.1%) | 18.5% (33.1%) | 13.8% (27.3%) |
| > = 4 drugs | 0.1% (0.5%) | 1.1% (3.8%) | 3.1% (7.4%) | 0.1% (0.9%) | 2.9% (7.2%) | 9.9% (17.8%) | 6.4% (12.7%) |
| > = 5 drugs | 0.0% (0.%) | 0.4% (1.4%) | 1.3% (3.0%) | 0.0% (0.3%) | 1.3% (3.2%) | 5.0% (9.1%) | 2.8% (5.5%) |
| > = 6 drugs | 0.0% (0.0%) | 0.2% (0.6%) | 0.5% (1.2%) | 0.0% (0.1%) | 0.6% (1.5%) | 2.4% (4.3%) | 1.1% (2.3%) |
| Rank 1 | Codeine (7.2%) | Codeine (9.4%) | Codeine (9.5%) | Codeine (8.8%) | Oxycodone (15.0%) | Oxycodone (15.8%) | Simvastatin (13.4%) |
| Rank 2 | Lansoprazole (1.7%) | Oxycodone (7.8%) | Oxycodone (8.8%) | Lansoprazole (1.4%) | Codeine (10.6%) | Tramadol (13.8%) | Metoprolol (10.8%) |
| Rank 3 | Omeprazole (0.6%) | Tramadol (4.0%) | Simvastatin (8.2%) | Risperidone (1.1%) | Tramadol (8.3%) | Omeprazole (10.9%) | Omeprazole (9.2%) |
| Rank 4 | Atomoxetine (0.5%) | Sertraline (3.2%) | Omeprazole (6.2%) | Omeprazole (1.0%) | Citalopram (4.8%) | Simvastatin (9.6%) | Tramadol (8.5%) |
| Rank 5 | Sertraline (0.5%) | Omeprazole (3.1%) | Tramadol (6.2%) | Oxycodone (0.7%) | Omeprazole (4.6%) | Citalopram (7.6%) | Codeine (8.2%) |
| Rank 6 | Risperidone (0.4%) | Citalopram (2.9%) | Metoprolol (4.4%) | Atomoxetine (0.6%) | Sertraline (4.3%) | Metoprolol (7.3%) | Oxycodone (8.0%) |
| Rank 7 | Oxycodone (0.3%) | Escitalopram (2.2%) | Citalopram (3.3%) | Sertraline (0.6%) | Aripiprazole (1.9%) | Codeine (7.1%) | Warfarin (5.6%) |
| Rank 8 | Aripiprazole (0.2%) | Pantoprazole (1.3%) | Sertraline (2.8%) | Aripiprazole (0.5%) | Risperidone (1.8%) | Sertraline (4.4%) | Clopidogrel (5.1%) |
CCAE: Truven MarketScan® Commercial Claims and Encounters dataset. PGx drugs: drugs for which pharmacogenomic guidelines are available.
Number of expected drug-phenotype co-occurrences of highest priority according to CPIC guidelines (CPIC level A) or high clinical significance according to DPWG guidelines (DPWG clinical significance classes C–F) within the observed four-year time window.
PGx drugs included in all estimations: amitriptyline, azathioprine, clomipramine, clopidogrel, doxepin, glimepiride, haloperidol, imipramine, mercaptopurine, metoprolol, nortriptyline, paroxetine, propafenone, risperidone sertraline, tamoxifen, thioguanine, tramadol, venlafaxine. Estimations which additionally included codeine are shown for comparison. The rationale for including / excluding drug substances is described in the Methods section (‘Drug substances included in the estimation’).
| CCAE (age 0–13) | CCAE (age 14–39) | CCAE (age 40–64) | Medicaid (age 0–13) | Medicaid (age 14–39) | Medicaid (age 40–64) | Medicare (age > = 65) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 893 962 | 22 824 848 | 26 561 525 | 4 151 506 | 3 032 191 | 1 130 797 | 5 429 266 | |
| 3 317 (0.0%) | 53 341 (0.2%) | 223 915 (0.4%) | 1 919 (0.0%) | 12 149 (0.4%) | 11 252 (1.0%) | 111 095 (2.0%) | |
| 31 189 (0.3%) | 137 906 (0.6%) | 445 607 (0.8%) | 15 370 (0.4%) | 23 866 (0.8%) | 14 183 (1.3%) | 128 905 (2.4%) | |
| DPWG class C | 10 324 (0.1%) | 155 461 (0.7%) | 285 894 (1.1%) | 9 225 (0.2%) | 39 739 (1.3%) | 27 680 (2.4%) | 82 003(1.5%) |
| DPWG class D | 2 840 (0.0%) | 19 141 (0.1%) | 84 057 (0.3%) | 2 167 (0.1%) | 4 728 (0.2%) | 6 739 (0.6%) | 41 927 (0.8%) |
| DPWG class E | 352 (0.0%) | 959 (0.0%) | 8 463 (0.0%) | 148 (0.0%) | 109 (0.0%) | 757 (0.1%) | 2 786 (0.1%) |
| DPWG class F | 265 (0.0%) | 5 921 (0.0%) | 120 556 (0.5%) | 157 (0.0%) | 1 361 (0.0%) | 13 745 (1.2%) | 91 346 (1.7%) |
| 13 781 (0.1%) | 181 482 (0.8%) | 605 534 (1.9%) | 11 697 (0.3%) | 59 694 (1.5%) | 48 921 (4.3%) | 218 062 (4.1%) | |
| 41 653 (0.4%) | 266 047 (1.2%) | 598 302 (2.3%) | 25 147 (0.6%) | 57 654 (1.9%) | 51 852 (4.6%) | 235 871 (4.4%) | |
a Detailed per-class estimates including codeine were omitted here; full data can be found in S7 Table. CPIC: Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium. DPWG: Dutch Pharmacogenetics Working Group. CCAE: Truven MarketScan® Commercial Claims and Encounters dataset.
Fig 1Distribution of incident use within four-year time window among therapeutic areas.