| Literature DB >> 30739312 |
Mariamena Arbitrio1, Francesca Scionti2, Emanuela Altomare2, Maria Teresa Di Martino2, Giuseppe Agapito3, Teresa Galeano2, Nicoletta Staropoli4, Eleonora Iuliano2, Francesco Grillone4, Fernanda Fabiani5, Daniele Caracciolo2, Mario Cannataro3, Grazia Arpino6, Daniele Santini7, Pierfrancesco Tassone2,3, Pierosandro Tagliaferri2,3.
Abstract
Taxane-related peripheral neuropathy (TrPN) is a dose-limiting toxicity with important interindividual variability. Genetic polymorphisms in absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) genes may account for variability in drug efficacy and/or toxicity. By the use of Affymetrix drug-metabolizing enzyme and transporter microarray platform, in a retrospective case-control study, the correlation between ADME polymorphic variants and grades ≥ 2-3-TrPN was investigated. In a breast cancer (BC) training set, five single-nucleotide polymorphisms in NR1I3 and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT)2B7 genes were correlated to grades ≥ 2-3-TrPN protection. By receiver operating characteristic curves, the grades ≥ 2-3-TrPN-related candidate biomarkers in an independent series of 54 patients with BC (17 cases and 37 controls) were validated. NR1I3 was correlated to paclitaxel-TrPN and UGT2B7 to docetaxel-TrPN. Moreover, a genetic signature of prognostic relevance for BC outcome was found. Our findings might have potential relevance for personalized management of patients with BC for prevention of treatment failure in ultrametabolizer genetic variants.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30739312 DOI: 10.1002/cpt.1391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol Ther ISSN: 0009-9236 Impact factor: 6.875