| Literature DB >> 28546997 |
Margot A Cousin1,2, Eric T Matey1, Patrick R Blackburn3,4, Nicole J Boczek1,2, Tammy M McAllister1, Teresa M Kruisselbrink1, Dusica Babovic-Vuksanovic1,5, Konstantinos N Lazaridis1,6, Eric W Klee1,2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We characterized the pharmacogenomics (PGx) results received by diagnostic odyssey patients as secondary findings during clinical whole exome sequencing (WES) testing as a part of their care in Mayo Clinic's Individualized Medicine Clinic to determine the potential benefits and limitations to this cohort.Entities:
Keywords: Exome sequencing; pediatric; pharmacogenomics; precision medicine; secondary findings
Year: 2017 PMID: 28546997 PMCID: PMC5441410 DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Genomic Med ISSN: 2324-9269 Impact factor: 2.183
Figure 1Diagnostic odyssey cohort characteristics. The cohort of 98 patients is skewed toward a pediatric population and is predominantly white by self‐report. (A) Frequency distribution of patients by age at WES testing. (B) Percentage of patients by race as self‐reported and recorded in the EMR. (C) Diagnostic odyssey patients with pharmacogenomic variants reported. A total of 94 patients were evaluated for specific alleles in the ,, and genes with the majority having at least one variant allele identified.
CYP2C19 and CYP2C9 genotypes, phenotypes, and actionable medications
| Metabolizer phenotype |
| Total | % of cohort | Patients with medication impact | Medications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultrarapid metabolizer |
| 3 | 3% | 2 | Omeprazole, esomeprazole |
| Rapid metabolizer |
| 24 | 26% | 8 | Clobazam, diazepam, lacosamide, omeprazole, sertraline, |
| Normal metabolizer |
| 39 | 41% | NA | NA |
| Intermediate metabolizer |
| 19 | 20% | 6 | Citalopram, clobazam, diazepam, esomeprazole, omeprazole, sertraline |
|
| 4 | 4% | 1 | Omeprazole | |
| Poor metabolizer |
| 5 | 5% | 2 | Diazepam, sertraline |
CYP2C19: NG_008384.2; NC_000010.10; NM_000769.2; Build GRCh37.p13. CYP2C9: NG_008385.1; NC_000010.10; NM_000771.3; Build GRCh37.p13. NA = not applicable.
Figure 2Patients by metabolizer phenotype or warfarin dosing recommendations. A total of 94 patients were evaluated for PGx variant alleles by Baylor Genetics as part of clinical WES testing. The metabolizer phenotypes were interpreted from the variant alleles reported for (A) (NG_008384.2; NC_000010.10; NM_000769.2; Build GRCh37.p13) and (B) (NG_008385.1; NC_000010.10; NM_000771.3; Build GRCh37.p13), and the suggested warfarin dosing recommendations for the (C) combined interpretation of and (NG_011564.1; NC_000016.9; NM_024006; Build GRCh37.p13) according to CPIC guidelines. The *1 allele was inferred in the absence of a reported variant allele. Current medication use was abstracted from the EMR.
CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes by warfarin dosing recommendations
| Warfarin dose |
| Total | % of cohort |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5–7 mg/day |
| 20 | 21% |
|
| 7 | 7% | |
|
| 35 | 37% | |
| 3–4 mg/day |
| 2 | 2% |
|
| 1 | 1% | |
|
| 1 | 1% | |
|
| 4 | 4% | |
|
| 1 | 1% | |
|
| 14 | 15% | |
|
| 2 | 2% | |
| 0.5–2 mg/day |
| 2 | 2% |
|
| 1 | 1% | |
|
| 2 | 2% |
No patients with decreased warfarin‐dosing recommendations were taking warfarin at the time the WES results were returned. Genotypes not shown, such as *3/*3 were not observed in our cohort. CYP2C9: NG_008385.1; NC_000010.10; NM_000771.3; Build GRCh37.p13. VKORC1: NG_011564.1; NC_000016.9; NM_024006; Build GRCh37.p13).
Figure 3Allele frequencies for variant alleles in and inferring *1. Variant allele frequencies for (NG_008385.1; NC_000010.10; NM_000771.3; Build GRCh37.p13) differ by population as calculated from publicly available data (Fakhro et al. 2016; Lek et al. 2016) leading to varying probability of error in inferring the presence of a *1 allele when only a subset of alleles are reported. Purple shading indicates variant allele frequencies from the variant alleles reported clinically on the cohort. Orange shading indicates variant allele frequencies from actionable alleles not reported on the cohort. Blue shading indicates the frequency of alleles inferred as being *1 in the absence of the variant alleles.