| Literature DB >> 30886894 |
David F Kisor1, Christopher L Farrell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As pharmacogenomics (PGx), a component of genetics/genomics and precision medicine, gains traction in the clinical setting, education of health care providers and health professions students must be made broadly available to improve accessibility of such services to patients. As medication experts with education in pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics, pharmacists must further their education to include pharmacogenomics. Currently, few opportunities exist to gain this type of education, and therefore, these services are not yet broadly available to the public.Entities:
Keywords: certification; education; pharmacists; pharmacogenetics; pharmacogenomics
Year: 2019 PMID: 30886894 PMCID: PMC6415470 DOI: 10.1177/2382120519834325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Educ Curric Dev ISSN: 2382-1205
Subject matter included in the online PGx program.
| Module 1. The science | Lesson | Module 2. Practical application | Lesson |
|---|---|---|---|
| Section I. | 1. Introduction to personalized medicine | Module 2 takes the information from module 1 and relates the science to clinical application. This is done in a broad context of pharmacist competencies described by the NIH funded Genetics/Genomics Competency Center. Patient cases demonstrate further application. The pharmacist patient care process as related to PGx is presented. | 12. Science overview and clinical application |
| Section II. | 2. Pharmacogenetics and pharmacokinetics | ||
| Section III. | 4. Abacavir- |
Results of pre- and post-genetics/genomics/pharmacogenomics competencies survey related to the 5-point Likert-type scale (strongly disagree [SD 1], disagree [D 2], neutral [N 3], agree [A 4], and strongly agree [SA 5]).
| Overall | Student pharmacists (n = 63) | Pharmacists | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-program (mean) | Post-program (mean) | Pre-program (mean) | Post-program (mean) | Pre-program (mean) | Post-program (mean) | |
| 1-B1. I am confident that I can demonstrate an understanding of the basic genetic/genomic concepts and nomenclature. | A | SA | A | SA | N | A |
| 2-B2. I can clearly recognize and appreciate the role of behavioral, social, and environmental factors (lifestyle, socioeconomic factors, pollutants, etc.) to modify or influence genetics in the manifestation of disease. | A | SA | A | SA | A | SA |
| 3-B3. I am able to identify drug and disease-associated genetic variations that facilitate development of prevention, diagnostic and treatment strategies. | N | A | N | SA | N | A |
| 4-B4. I can appreciate the differences in testing methodologies and are aware of the need to explore these differences in drug literature evaluation. | A | A | A | A | N | A |
| 5-B5. I am confident to use family history (minimum of 3 generations) in assessing predisposition to disease and selection of drug treatment. | N | A | N | A | N | A |
| 6-G1. I have a good understanding of the role of genetic factors in maintaining health and preventing disease. | A | SA | A | SA | A | SA |
| 7-G2. I can confidently assess the difference between clinical diagnosis of disease and identification of genetic predisposition to disease and understand that genetic variation is not strictly correlated with disease manifestation. | A | SA | A | A | N | SA |
| 8-G3. I can appreciate that pharmacogenomic testing may also reveal certain genetic disease predispositions, such as the Apo E4 polymorphism. | A | SA | A | SA | N | SA |
| 9-P1. I am confident to demonstrate an understanding of how genetic variation in a large number of proteins, including drug transporters, drug metabolizing enzymes, direct protein targets of drugs, and other proteins influence pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics relate to pharmacologic effects and drug response. | N | SA | N | SA | N | SA |
| 10-P2. I have a good understanding of the influence (or lack thereof) of ethnicity in genetic polymorphisms and associations of polymorphisms with drug response. | N | SA | A | SA | N | SA |
| 11-P3. I can confidently recognize the availability of evidence-based guidelines that synthesize information relevant to genomic/pharmacogenomic tests and selection of drug therapy (eg, Clinical Pharmacogenomics Implementation Consortium, or CPIC) | N | SA | N | SA | N | SA |
| 12-E1. I have a good understanding of the potential physical and/or psychological benefits, limitations, and risk of genomic/pharmacogenomic information for individuals, family members, and communities, especially with genomic/pharmacogenomic tests that may relate to predisposition to disease. | A | SA | A | SA | N | SA |
| 13-E2. I have a good understanding of the increased liability that accompanies access to detailed genomic patient information and maintain confidentiality and security. | A | SA | A | SA | A | SA |
| 14-E3. I can confidently adopt a culturally sensitive and ethical approach to patient counseling regarding genomic/pharmacogenomic test results. | A | SA | A | SA | A | SA |
| 15-E4. I have a good appreciation of the cost, cost-effectiveness, and reimbursement by insurers relevant to genomic/pharmacogenomic test results. | N | A | N | A | N | A |
| 16-E5. I can confidently identify the need to refer a patient to a genetic specialist or genetic counselor. | N | SA | N | SA | N | SA |
The mean value rounded to the closest assigned Likert-type scale label is shown for the pre- and post-survey competency statements.
Figure 1.Overall percent of respondents relative to 5-point Likert-type scale labels pre- and post-genetics/genomics/pharmacogenomics competency certificate training program. Competency domains: (B) Basic Genetic Concepts; (G) Genetics and Disease; (P) Pharmacogenetics/Pharmacogenomics; and (E) Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications.
Figure 2.Student pharmacist percent of respondents relative to 5-point Likert-type scale labels pre- and post-genetics/genomics/pharmacogenomics competency certificate training program. Competency domains: (B) Basic Genetic Concepts; (G) Genetics and Disease; (P) Pharmacogenetics/Pharmacogenomics; and (E) Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications.
Figure 3.Pharmacist percent of respondents relative to 5-point Likert-type scale labels pre- and post-genetics/genomics/pharmacogenomics competency certificate training program. Competency domains: (B) Basic Genetic Concepts; (G) Genetics and Disease; (P) Pharmacogenetics/Pharmacogenomics; and (E) Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications.