| Literature DB >> 34429634 |
Lorena Carrascal-Laso1, Manuel Ángel Franco-Martín1, Elena Marcos-Vadillo2, Ignacio Ramos-Gallego3, Belén García-Berrocal2, Eduardo Mayor-Toranzo1, Santiago Sánchez-Iglesias4, Carolina Lorenzo4, Alfonso Sevillano-Jiménez1, Almudena Sánchez-Martín5, María Jesús García-Salgado2, María Isidoro-García2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder that often manifests within the first three decades of life. Its prognosis is uncertain and may result in a prolonged treatment that could extend throughout the entire lifespan of the patient. Antipsychotic drugs are characterized by a high interindividual variability when considering therapeutic effect and emergence of adverse effects. Such interindividual variability is thought to be associated primarily with pharmacokinetic matters.Entities:
Keywords: antipsychotics; cytochrome P-450; pharmacoeconomics; pharmacogenetics; psychotic disorders
Year: 2021 PMID: 34429634 PMCID: PMC8379643 DOI: 10.2147/PGPM.S320816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmgenomics Pers Med ISSN: 1178-7066
Demographic Data
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
| PATIENTS | |
| Total number of patients included: | 188 |
| - Average age (range; years) | 47 (24–84) |
| - Male: Female (%) | 59.58: 37.77 |
| DIAGNOSTIC | |
| DSM-V | n (%) |
| F03 - Dementia | 1 (0.53) |
| F19 – Substance-Related Disorder | 12 (6.38) |
| F20 - Schizophrenia | 126 (67.02) |
| F22 – Persistent Delusional Disorder | 2 (1.06) |
| F23 – Brief and Acute Psychotic Disorder | 1 (0.53) |
| F25 – Schizoaffective Disorder | 13 (6.92) |
| F31 – Bipolar Disorder | 25 (13.30) |
| F33 – Major Depressive Disorder | 1 (0.53) |
| F60 – Specific Personality Disorders | 2 (1.06) |
| F61 – Mixed Personality Disorder | 1 (0.53) |
| F79 – Intellectual Disability | 2 (1.06) |
Note: All the pathologies are referred to the official standard nomenclature.
Abbreviation: DSM-V, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th-edition.
Phenotype Relative Abundance
| n | PM | IM | EM | UM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CYP1A2 | 179 | – | – | 13.97% (n = 25) | 86.03% (n = 154) |
| CYP2B6 | 166 | 9.04% (n = 15) | 40.96% (n = 68) | 50% (n = 83) | – |
| CYP2C9 | 183 | 7.10% (n = 13) | 35.52% (n = 65) | 57.38% (n = 105) | – |
| CYP2C19 | 186 | 3.23% (n = 6) | 20.43% (n = 38) | 47.85% (n = 89) | 27.96% (n = 52) |
| CYP2D6 | 183 | 3.78% (n = 7) | 5.95% (n = 11) | 85.95% (n = 159) | 3. 24% (n =6) |
| CYP3A4 | 188 | 1.06% (n = 2) | 7.45% (n = 14) | 91.49% (n = 172) | – |
| CYP3A5 | 187 | 87.85% (n = 159) | 13.81% (n = 25) | 1.66% (n = 3) | – |
Note: Allele Frequencies of the sample were similar to the NCBI dbSNP ALFA Project Frequencies.
Abbreviations: PM, poor metabolizer; IM, intermediate metabolizer; EM, extensive metabolizer; UM, ultrarapid metabolizer.
Pharmaceutical Costs
| Antipsychotic | PrePGx (€) | PostPGx (€) | Variation (%) | PrePGx (€/Patient) | PostPGx (€/Patient) | Variation (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olanzapine | 38,754.79 | 18,438.89 | −51.74 | 717.68 | 472.79 | −34.12 |
| Aripiprazole | 62,296.64 | 84,476.43 | +20.16 | 1271.36 | 1919.92 | +51.01 |
| Risperidone | 27,674.40 | 354.12 | −98.70 | 588.82 | 177.06 | −69.99 |
| Amisulpride | 4820.19 | 1222.15 | −74.65 | 370.78 | 174.59 | −52.91 |
| Clozapine | 10,398.30 | 5178.44 | −34.90 | 273.64 | 207.14 | −24.30 |
| Paliperidone | 113,284.51 | 297,452.8 | +162.57 | 2832.11 | 3913.85 | +38.20 |
| Quetiapine | 242,287.37 | 14,289.75 | −94.10 | 3727.50 | 752.09 | −79.82 |
| Asenapine | 14,289.75 | 9526.50 | −33.33 | 752.09 | 635.10 | −15.56 |
| Anual Total | 513,805.94 | 462,618.92 | −9.96 | 2886.55 | 2598.98 | −9.96 |
| Triennium Total | 1,798,320.80 | 1,619,166.20 | −9.96 | 10,102.93 | 9096.44 | −9.96 |
Abbreviations: PrePGx, pharmaceutical cost associated with each drug before most of the population was pharmacogenotyped (2013–2016); PostPGx, pharmaceutical cost associated with each drug after most of the population was pharmacogenotyped (2016–2019).
Figure 1Total hospitalizations per patient, total days hospitalized per patient and hospitalization mean duration.
Figure 2Hospitalization reasons.
Figure 3Average hospitalizations, average days hospitalized per patient and hospitalization duration for each demographic variable.
Figure 4Average pharmaceutical costs and hospitalization costs per patient.