Literature DB >> 35331649

Implementation of preemptive DNA sequence-based pharmacogenomics testing across a large academic medical center: The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K Study.

Liewei Wang1, Steven E Scherer2, Suzette J Bielinski3, Donna M Muzny4, Leila A Jones5, John Logan Black6, Ann M Moyer6, Jyothsna Giri5, Richard R Sharp7, Eric T Matey8, Jessica A Wright8, Lance J Oyen8, Wayne T Nicholson9, Mathieu Wiepert10, Terri Sullard5, Timothy B Curry11, Carolyn R Rohrer Vitek5, Tammy M McAllister5, Jennifer L St Sauver12, Pedro J Caraballo13, Konstantinos N Lazaridis14, Eric Venner4, Xiang Qin15, Jianhong Hu4, Christie L Kovar4, Viktoriya Korchina4, Kimberly Walker4, HarshaVardhan Doddapaneni15, Tsung-Jung Wu4, Ritika Raj4, Shawn Denson4, Wen Liu4, Gauthami Chandanavelli4, Lan Zhang4, Qiaoyan Wang15, Divya Kalra15, Mary Beth Karow6, Kimberley J Harris6, Hugues Sicotte6, Sandra E Peterson6, Amy E Barthel6, Brenda E Moore6, Jennifer M Skierka6, Michelle L Kluge6, Katrina E Kotzer6, Karen Kloke6, Jessica M Vander Pol6, Heather Marker5, Joseph A Sutton10, Adrijana Kekic16, Ashley Ebenhoh8, Dennis M Bierle13, Michael J Schuh17, Christopher Grilli16, Sara Erickson18, Audrey Umbreit19, Leah Ward17, Sheena Crosby17, Eric A Nelson16, Sharon Levey20, Michelle Elliott21, Steve G Peters22, Naveen Pereira23, Mark Frye24, Fadi Shamoun25, Matthew P Goetz26, Iftikhar J Kullo23, Robert Wermers27, Jan A Anderson8, Christine M Formea8, Razan M El Melik8, John D Zeuli8, Joseph R Herges8, Carrie A Krieger8, Robert W Hoel8, Jodi L Taraba8, Scott R St Thomas5, Imad Absah28, Matthew E Bernard29, Stephanie R Fink30, Andrea Gossard31, Pamela L Grubbs32, Therese M Jacobson32, Paul Takahashi30, Sharon C Zehe33, Susan Buckles34, Michelle Bumgardner32, Colette Gallagher34, Kelliann Fee-Schroeder5, Nichole R Nicholas5, Melody L Powers35, Ahmed K Ragab5, Darcy M Richardson5, Anthony Stai10, Jaymi Wilson5, Joel E Pacyna7, Janet E Olson36, Erica J Sutton7, Annika T Beck7, Caroline Horrow7, Krishna R Kalari37, Nicholas B Larson37, Hongfang Liu38, Liwei Wang38, Guilherme S Lopes39, Bijan J Borah40, Robert R Freimuth38, Ye Zhu41, Debra J Jacobson37, Matthew A Hathcock37, Sebastian M Armasu37, Michaela E McGree37, Ruoxiang Jiang37, Tyler H Koep42, Jason L Ross42, Matthew G Hilden42, Kathleen Bosse42, Bronwyn Ramey42, Isabelle Searcy42, Eric Boerwinkle43, Richard A Gibbs44, Richard M Weinshilboum45.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K Study enabled preemptive, sequence-based pharmacogenomics (PGx)-driven drug prescribing practices in routine clinical care within a large cohort. We also generated the tools and resources necessary for clinical PGx implementation and identified challenges that need to be overcome. Furthermore, we measured the frequency of both common genetic variation for which clinical guidelines already exist and rare variation that could be detected by DNA sequencing, rather than genotyping.
METHODS: Targeted oligonucleotide-capture sequencing of 77 pharmacogenes was performed using DNA from 10,077 consented Mayo Clinic Biobank volunteers. The resulting predicted drug response-related phenotypes for 13 genes, including CYP2D6 and HLA, affecting 21 drug-gene pairs, were deposited preemptively in the Mayo electronic health record.
RESULTS: For the 13 pharmacogenes of interest, the genomes of 79% of participants carried clinically actionable variants in 3 or more genes, and DNA sequencing identified an average of 3.3 additional conservatively predicted deleterious variants that would not have been evident using genotyping.
CONCLUSION: Implementation of preemptive rather than reactive and sequence-based rather than genotype-based PGx prescribing revealed nearly universal patient applicability and required integrated institution-wide resources to fully realize individualized drug therapy and to show more efficient use of health care resources.
Copyright © 2022 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical translation; Implementation; Individualized medicine; Pharmacogenomics; Pre-emptive clinical DNA sequencing

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35331649      PMCID: PMC9272414          DOI: 10.1016/j.gim.2022.01.022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genet Med        ISSN: 1098-3600            Impact factor:   8.864


  28 in total

1.  Adoption of pharmacogenomic testing by US physicians: results of a nationwide survey.

Authors:  E J Stanek; C L Sanders; K A Johansen Taber; M Khalid; A Patel; R R Verbrugge; B C Agatep; R E Aubert; R S Epstein; F W Frueh
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 6.875

2.  Cohort Profile: The Right Drug, Right Dose, Right Time: Using Genomic Data to Individualize Treatment Protocol (RIGHT Protocol).

Authors:  Suzette J Bielinski; Jennifer L St Sauver; Janet E Olson; Nicholas B Larson; John L Black; Steven E Scherer; Matthew E Bernard; Eric Boerwinkle; Bijan J Borah; Pedro J Caraballo; Timothy B Curry; HarshaVardhan Doddapaneni; Christine M Formea; Robert R Freimuth; Richard A Gibbs; Jyothsna Giri; Matthew A Hathcock; Jianhong Hu; Debra J Jacobson; Leila A Jones; Sara Kalla; Tyler H Koep; Viktoriya Korchina; Christie L Kovar; Sandra Lee; Hongfang Liu; Eric T Matey; Michaela E McGree; Tammy M McAllister; Ann M Moyer; Donna M Muzny; Wayne T Nicholson; Lance J Oyen; Xiang Qin; Ritika Raj; Véronique L Roger; Carolyn R Rohrer Vitek; Jason L Ross; Richard R Sharp; Paul Y Takahashi; Eric Venner; Kimberly Walker; Liwei Wang; Qiaoyan Wang; Jessica A Wright; Tsung-Jung Wu; Liewei Wang; Richard M Weinshilboum
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2020-02-01       Impact factor: 7.196

3.  Implementation of a pharmacogenomics education program for pharmacists.

Authors:  Christine M Formea; Wayne T Nicholson; Carolyn Rohrer Vitek; Kelly K Wix; Kristen B McCullough; Julie L Cunningham; John D Zeuli; Eric T Matey; Julianna A Merten; Darcy M Richardson; Andrea L Billings; Garrett E Schramm
Journal:  Am J Health Syst Pharm       Date:  2018-10-09       Impact factor: 2.637

4.  Implementation of Clinical Pharmacogenomics within a Large Health System: From Electronic Health Record Decision Support to Consultation Services.

Authors:  J Kevin Hicks; David Stowe; Marc A Willner; Maya Wai; Thomas Daly; Steven M Gordon; Bret A Lashner; Sumit Parikh; Robert White; Kathryn Teng; Timothy Moss; Angelika Erwin; Jeffrey Chalmers; Charis Eng; Scott Knoer
Journal:  Pharmacotherapy       Date:  2016-07-20       Impact factor: 4.705

5.  Preemptive genotyping for personalized medicine: design of the right drug, right dose, right time-using genomic data to individualize treatment protocol.

Authors:  Suzette J Bielinski; Janet E Olson; Jyotishman Pathak; Richard M Weinshilboum; Liewei Wang; Kelly J Lyke; Euijung Ryu; Paul V Targonski; Michael D Van Norstrand; Matthew A Hathcock; Paul Y Takahashi; Jennifer B McCormick; Kiley J Johnson; Karen J Maschke; Carolyn R Rohrer Vitek; Marissa S Ellingson; Eric D Wieben; Gianrico Farrugia; Jody A Morrisette; Keri J Kruckeberg; Jamie K Bruflat; Lisa M Peterson; Joseph H Blommel; Jennifer M Skierka; Matthew J Ferber; John L Black; Linnea M Baudhuin; Eric W Klee; Jason L Ross; Tamra L Veldhuizen; Cloann G Schultz; Pedro J Caraballo; Robert R Freimuth; Christopher G Chute; Iftikhar J Kullo
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 7.616

Review 6.  Pharmacogenomics: Precision Medicine and Drug Response.

Authors:  Richard M Weinshilboum; Liewei Wang
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 7.616

7.  Implementing Pharmacogenomics in Europe: Design and Implementation Strategy of the Ubiquitous Pharmacogenomics Consortium.

Authors:  C H van der Wouden; A Cambon-Thomsen; E Cecchin; K C Cheung; C L Dávila-Fajardo; V H Deneer; V Dolžan; M Ingelman-Sundberg; S Jönsson; M O Karlsson; M Kriek; C Mitropoulou; G P Patrinos; M Pirmohamed; M Samwald; E Schaeffeler; M Schwab; D Steinberger; J Stingl; G Sunder-Plassmann; G Toffoli; R M Turner; M H van Rhenen; J J Swen; H-J Guchelaar
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 6.875

8.  Pharmacogenetics at Scale: An Analysis of the UK Biobank.

Authors:  Gregory McInnes; Adam Lavertu; Katrin Sangkuhl; Teri E Klein; Michelle Whirl-Carrillo; Russ B Altman
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2020-12-17       Impact factor: 6.903

9.  Pharmacogenomic knowledge gaps and educational resource needs among physicians in selected specialties.

Authors:  Katherine A Johansen Taber; Barry D Dickinson
Journal:  Pharmgenomics Pers Med       Date:  2014-07-10

10.  The Pharmacogene Variation (PharmVar) Consortium: Incorporation of the Human Cytochrome P450 (CYP) Allele Nomenclature Database.

Authors:  Andrea Gaedigk; Magnus Ingelman-Sundberg; Neil A Miller; J Steven Leeder; Michelle Whirl-Carrillo; Teri E Klein
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2017-11-14       Impact factor: 6.875

View more
  3 in total

1.  A Mixed-Methods Protocol to Identify Best Practices for Implementing Pharmacogenetic Testing in Clinical Settings.

Authors:  Nina R Sperber; Deborah Cragun; Megan C Roberts; Lisa M Bendz; Parker Ince; Sarah Gonzales; Susanne B Haga; R Ryanne Wu; Natasha J Petry; Laura Ramsey; Ryley Uber
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2022-08-13

2.  Characterizing pharmacogenetic programs using the consolidated framework for implementation research: A structured scoping review.

Authors:  John H McDermott; Stuart Wright; Videha Sharma; William G Newman; Katherine Payne; Paul Wilson
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2022-08-18

3.  Public perceptions of pharmacogenomic services in Ireland - Are people with chronic disease more likely to want service availability than those without? A questionnaire study.

Authors:  Joseph O'Shea; Cristín Ryan; Joseph Gallagher; Claire O'Brien; Conor Morris; Eoin Dwyer; James Mc Laughlin; Laura Fitzpatrick; Maire O'Meara; Sarah Kelly; Sophie Knox; Mark Ledwidge
Journal:  Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm       Date:  2022-09-21
  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.