| Literature DB >> 32230776 |
Richard D Beger1, Michael A Schmidt2,3, Rima Kaddurah-Daouk4.
Abstract
Pharmacometabolomics (PMx) studies use information contained in metabolic profiles (or metabolome) to inform about how a subject will respond to drug treatment. Genome, gut microbiome, sex, nutrition, age, stress, health status, and other factors can impact the metabolic profile of an individual. Some of these factors are known to influence the individual response to pharmaceutical compounds. An individual's metabolic profile has been referred to as his or her "metabotype." As such, metabolomic profiles obtained prior to, during, or after drug treatment could provide insights about drug mechanism of action and variation of response to treatment. Furthermore, there are several types of PMx studies that are used to discover and inform patterns associated with varied drug responses (i.e., responders vs. non-responders; slow or fast metabolizers). The PMx efforts could simultaneously provide information related to an individual's pharmacokinetic response during clinical trials and be used to predict patient response to drugs making pharmacometabolomic clinical research valuable for precision medicine. PMx biomarkers can also be discovered and validated during FDA clinical trials. Using biomarkers during medical development is described in US Law under the 21st Century Cures Act. Information on how to submit biomarkers to the FDA and their context of use is defined herein.Entities:
Keywords: drug response; metabotypes; pharmacometabolomics; pharmacometabonomics; precision medicine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32230776 PMCID: PMC7241083 DOI: 10.3390/metabo10040129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Pharmacometabolomics Biomarkers.
| BEST Biomarker Category | Relationship between Metabolites and Biomarker Category | Potential Context of Use (COU) in a Clinical Study |
|---|---|---|
| Prognosis Biomarker | Metabolites that indicate a likelihood of a future clinical event | Stratify Patients |
| Diagnostic Biomarker | Metabolites that detect the presence of a disease or identify individuals with a subtype of the disease | Patient Selection |
| Monitoring Biomarker | Metabolites that are measured continually over time to assess status of a disease or medical condition or for evidence of exposure to (or effect of) a medical product or an environmental agent | Indicate Toxicity or assess safety |
| Predictive Biomarker | Metabolites that predict outcome | Identify individuals based on effect from a specific intervention or exposure |
| Safety Biomarker | Metabolites that are related to adverse and safety events | Indicate the presence or extent of toxicity related to an intervention or exposure |
| Pharmacodynamic Response Biomarker | Metabolites that are related to response in an individual or group of individuals who have been exposed to a medical product or an environmental agent | Efficacy biomarkers/surrogate endpoint |
| Susceptibility/Risk Biomarker | Metabolites related to developing a disease or medical condition in an patient that does not currently have clinically apparent disease or medical condition | Indicate the potential for developing a disease or sensitivity to an exposure |
| Provisional Biomarker | Metabolites that are in discovery and show potential as biomarkers, although they have not been validated as true biomarkers | Discovery-associated analytes that assist in identification of signals with potential biological meaning. |
*BEST (Biomarkers, EndpointS, and other Tools) Resource [35].
Figure 1Pharmacometabolomics baseline and drug treatment approaches.
Figure 2Pharmacometabolomics procedure consists of sample collection and preparation, data collection and analysis, and model development and biomarker discovery.
Figure 3How the pool of drug-conjugating nutrients may influence the development of adverse effects with time.