| Literature DB >> 31961467 |
D Max Smith1,2, Beth N Peshkin2, T Blaise Springfield2, Ryan P Brown1, Elizabeth Hwang1, Susanna Kmiecik3, Richard Shapiro4, Zayd Eldadah5, Conor Lundergan6, Joel McAlduff1, Bonnie Levin1, Sandra M Swain1,2.
Abstract
Most literature describing pharmacogenetic implementations are within academic medical centers and use single-gene tests. Our objective was to describe the results and lessons learned from a multisite pharmacogenetic pilot that utilized panel-based testing in academic and nonacademic settings. This was a retrospective analysis of 667 patients from a pilot in 4 perioperative and 5 outpatient cardiology clinics. Recommendations related to 12 genes and 65 drugs were classified as actionable or not actionable. They were ascertained from Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) guidelines and US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) labeling. Patients displayed a high prevalence of actionable results (88%, 99%) and use of medications (28%, 46%) with FDA or CPIC recommendations, respectively. Sixteen percent of patients had an actionable result for a current medication per CPIC compared with 5% per FDA labeling. A systematic approach by a health system may be beneficial given the quantity and diversity of patients affected.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31961467 PMCID: PMC7214646 DOI: 10.1111/cts.12748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 1752-8054 Impact factor: 4.689
Figure 1Classification of actionable recommendations for each drug‐gene‐phenotype trio. Both represent drug‐gene‐phenotype trios that had actionable recommendations from both organizations. The area covered by either Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) or US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) represents a drug‐gene‐phenotype trio with an actionable recommendation only provided by that organization. Neither represents drug‐gene‐phenotype trios that had a comment by at least one of the resources but was not deemed actionable by either organization.
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic |
All patients
|
Perioperative
|
Cardiology
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 70 (61, 76) | 67 (57, 74) | 72 (63, 78) |
| Sex, female | 339 (51) | 138 (58) | 201 (47) |
| Race | |||
| White | 424 (64) | 123 (52) | 301 (70) |
| African American | 87 (13) | 45 (19) | 42 (10) |
| Other | 67 (10) | 20 (8) | 47 (11) |
| Unknown | 89 (13) | 49 (21) | 40 (9) |
Data for age are displayed as median (interquartile range‐1, interquartile range‐3).
Phenotype results for genes with CPIC guidelines
| Gene | Phenotype | No. (%) |
|---|---|---|
|
| Uncertain susceptibility | 667 (100) |
|
| Normal metabolism | 355 (53) |
| Intermediate metabolism | 247 (37) | |
| Poor metabolism | 65 (10) | |
|
| Ultrarapid metabolism | 27 (4) |
| Rapid metabolism | 160 (24) | |
| Normal metabolism | 269 (40) | |
| Intermediate metabolism | 186 (29) | |
| Poor metabolism | 22 (3) | |
| Uncertain function | 2 (< 1) | |
| Unknown result | 1 (< 1) | |
|
| Normal metabolism | 434 (65) |
| Intermediate metabolism | 218 (33) | |
| Poor metabolism | 15 (2) | |
|
| Ultrarapid metabolism | 19 (3) |
| Normal to ultrarapid metabolism | 12 (2) | |
| Normal metabolism | 351 (53) | |
| Intermediate metabolism | 248 (37) | |
| Poor metabolism | 34 (5) | |
| Unknown result | 3 (< 1) | |
|
| Normal metabolism | 46 (7) |
| Intermediate metabolism | 125 (19) | |
| Poor metabolism | 496 (74) | |
|
| Normal metabolism | 659 (99) |
| Intermediate metabolism | 8 (1) | |
|
| Favorable response | 306 (46) |
| Unfavorable response | 360 (54) | |
| Unknown result | 1 (< 1) | |
|
| Malignant hyperthermia susceptible | 5 (1) |
| Uncertain susceptibility | 662 (99) | |
|
| Normal function | 495 (74) |
| Decreased function | 158 (24) | |
| Poor function | 14 (2) | |
|
| Normal metabolism | 607 (91) |
| Intermediate metabolism | 59 (9) | |
| Poor metabolism | 1 (< 1) | |
|
| Wild type | 274 (41) |
| Heterozygous | 305 (46) | |
| Homozygous | 88 (13) |
CPIC, Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium. CACNA1S, calcium voltage‐gated channel subunit alpha1 S; CYP2B6, cytochrome P450 family 2 subfamily B member 6; CYP2C19, cytochrome P450 family 2 subfamily C member 19; CYP2C9, cytochrome P450 family 2 subfamily C member 9; CYP2D6, cytochrome P450 family 2 subfamily D member 6; CYP3A5, cytochrome P450 family 3 subfamily A member 5; DPYD, dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase; IFNL3, interferon lambda 3; SLCO1B1, solute carrier organic anion transporter family member 1B1; RYR1, ryanodine receptor 1; TPMT, thiopurine S‐methyltransferase; VKORC1, vitamin K epoxide reductase complex subunit 1.
Data may not total 100% due to rounding.
CPIC guidelines were used as the standard for phenotype nomenclature.
Rather than a phenotype, CPIC recommendations related to VKORC1 are for a specific single nucleotide polymorphism (c.‐1639G > A, rs9923231).24
Uncertain susceptibility: The test did not find the patient to possess malignant hyperthermia susceptibility but the results do not eliminate the chance that a patient is susceptible to malignant hyperthermia. Patients may be susceptible to malignant hyperthermia due to genetic variants not tested or for nongenetic reasons.
Uncertain function: Definitive allele function has not been assigned by CPIC.
Unknown result: The laboratory did not generate a result.
Prevalence of actionability using CPIC guidelines and FDA labeling
| Medication data available ( | CPIC | FDA |
|---|---|---|
| Genetic results | ||
| Actionable result (i.e., may be actionable now or in the future) | 595 | 523 |
| No actionable result | 5 | 77 |
| Current prescriptions affected by PGx results | ||
| Current prescription for an affected drug | 277 | 168 |
| Recommendation: modify use | 97 | 27 |
| Recommendation: regular use | 180 | 141 |
| No current prescription for an affected drug | 323 | 432 |
CPIC, Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; PGx, pharmacogenomics.
More patients possessed an actionable results per CPIC than the FDA (P < 0.0001).
More patients possessed a prescription for drug affected by PGx results per CPIC than the FDA (P < 0.0001).
More patients possessed an actionable result for a medication they were currently prescribed per CPIC than the FDA (P < 0.0001).
Figure 2Actionable results per Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) by medication. Percentages are calculated using N = 600. Exact numbers are available in the supplement (Table ).
Figure 3Actionable results per US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by medication. Percentages are calculated using N = 600. Exact numbers are available in the supplement (Table ).