| Literature DB >> 29642909 |
Larisa H Cavallari1,2,3, Francesco Franchi4, Fabiana Rollini4, Latonya Been4, Andrea Rivas4, Malhar Agarwal4, D Max Smith5,6, Kimberly Newsom7, Yan Gong5,6, Amanda R Elsey5,8, Petr Starostik7,9, Julie A Johnson5,6,8, Dominick J Angiolillo4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The CYP2C19 nonfunctional genotype reduces clopidogrel effectiveness after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Following clinical implementation of CYP2C19 genotyping at University Florida (UF) Health Shands Hospital in 2012, where genotype results are available approximately 3 days after PCI, testing was expanded to UF Health Jacksonville in 2016 utilizing a rapid genotyping approach. We describe metrics with this latter implementation.Entities:
Keywords: CYP2C19; Clopidogrel; Genotype; Percutaneous coronary intervention; Prasugrel; Ticagrelor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29642909 PMCID: PMC5896099 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-018-1469-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
CYP2C19 test ordering and adoption rates in the first 12 months at UF Health Jacksonville
| Implementation metric | No. of patients (%) |
|---|---|
| Total number of patients who underwent left heart catheterization | 1366 |
| Patients who were genotyped | 931 |
| Genotype test adoption rate | 931/1366 (68%) |
| Genotypes successfully completed with initial sample | 802 (86%) |
| Total number of patients who underwent PCI | 505 |
| PCI patients who were genotyped | 392 |
| Genotype test adoption rate | 392/505 (78%) |
| Patients included in the analysis of antiplatelet therapy at discharge | 336 |
| Patients included in the analysis of antiplatelet therapy at 6 months | 258 |
PCI percutaneous coronary intervention
Characteristics of patients who underwent PCI and CYP2C19 genotyping over the first 12 months
| Characteristic | n = 392 |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 63 ± 11 |
| Male sex | 271 (69) |
| Race | |
| White | 292 (74.5) |
| Black | 93 (23.7) |
| Asian | 3 (0.8) |
| Other or not reported | 4 (1.0) |
| Past medical history | |
| Stroke or TIA | 48 (12.2) |
| Gastrointestinal hemorrhage | 7 (1.8) |
| Intracranial hemorrhage | 2 (0.5) |
| PCI indication | |
| STEMI | 74 (18.9) |
| NSTEMI | 99 (25.2) |
| Unstable angina | 174 (44.4) |
| Stable coronary disease | 45 (11.5) |
| P2Y12 inhibitor on admission | |
| Clopidogrel | 99 (25.3) |
| Prasugrel | 9 (2.3) |
| Ticagrelor | 13 (3.3) |
| Other or not available | 11 (2.8) |
| Anticoagulant on admissiona | |
| Warfarin | 9 (2.3) |
| Direct oral anticoagulant | 12 (3.0) |
| Low molecular weight heparin | 1 (0.3) |
| Not available | 9 (2.3) |
| Anticoagulant at dischargea | |
| Warfarin | 16 (4.1) |
| Direct oral anticoagulant | 16 (4.1) |
| Low molecular weight heparin | 1 (0.3) |
| CYP2C19 phenotype | |
| Poor metabolizer ( | 7 (1.8) |
| Intermediate metabolizer ( | 106 (27.0) |
| Normal metabolizer ( | 145 (37.0) |
| Rapid metabolizer ( | 110 (28.1) |
| Ultra-rapid metabolizer ( | 20 (5.1) |
| Inconclusive | 4 (1.0) |
Mean ± SD or no. (%)
PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, STEMI ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, NSTEMI non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, TIA transient ischemic attack
aWarfarin, direct oral anticoagulant, or low molecular weight heparin
Fig. 1Percent of patients on clopidogrel at discharge and 6 months by CYP2C19 phenotype. PM poor metabolizer, IM intermediate metabolizer. Other includes normal metabolizers, rapid metabolizers, and ultra-rapid metabolizers. *p = 0.020 for PM versus other at 6 months. **p = 0.104 for IM versus other at 6 months
Implementation approaches at two UF Health locations and lessons learned
| Approach | UF Health Jacksonville | UF Health Gainesville | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genotyping | Rapid genotyping using a Spartan RX™ platform, with results entered into the EHR approximately 90 min from sample collection | Genotyping using a GenMark DX® platform, with samples batched for processing and results entered into the EHR in an average of 3.5 days | Delays in obtaining genotype results can create significant disruptions in workflow that can be minimized when genotype results are available early after PCI |
| Antiplatelet therapy | There was a high use of prasugrel or ticagrelor early after PCI regardless of genotype. Use of prasugrel or ticagrelor declined in the 6 months following PCI for patients without a nonfunctional allele, but remained high in PMs, with two nonfunctional alleles | There was high use of clopidogrel as the preferred antiplatelet therapy early after PCI. After genotype results were available, there was a high switch rate to prasugrel or ticagrelor in both PMs and IMs | Genotype is important to inform switches from clopidogrel to prasugrel or ticagrelor in patients with a nonfunctional allele |
| Clinical pharmacy support and electronic clinical decision support | No clinical pharmacy support or electronic clinical decision support was provided | Significant pharmacist effort was devoted toward monitoring genotype test adoption and following up with physicians on test results in the first year of implementation. After the first year, pharmacist effort was limited to providing recommendations for patients with a nonfunctional allele. | Clinical pharmacist and electronic decision support is important in settings where return of genotype results is delayed |