| Literature DB >> 33517770 |
Sylvan Manuel Caspar1,2, Timo Schneider1, Patricia Stoll1, Janine Meienberg1, Gabor Matyas1,3.
Abstract
Pharmacogenetics represents a major driver of precision medicine, promising individualized drug selection and dosing. Traditionally, pharmacogenetic profiling has been performed using targeted genotyping that focuses on common/known variants. Recently, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is emerging as a more comprehensive short-read next-generation sequencing approach, enabling both gene diagnostics and pharmacogenetic profiling, including rare/novel variants, in a single assay. Using the example of the pharmacogene CYP2D6, we demonstrate the potential of WGS-based pharmacogenetic profiling as well as emphasize the limitations of short-read next-generation sequencing. In the near future, we envision a shift toward long-read sequencing as the predominant method for gene diagnostics and pharmacogenetic profiling, providing unprecedented data quality and improving patient care.Entities:
Keywords: CYP2D6; adverse drug reactions; long-read sequencing; next-generation sequencing; pharmacogenetics; precision medicine; pseudogenes; structural variation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33517770 DOI: 10.2217/pgs-2020-0155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacogenomics ISSN: 1462-2416 Impact factor: 2.533