| Literature DB >> 35582138 |
Gladys Olivera1,2, Luis Sendra1,2, María José Herrero1,2, Pablo Berlanga3, Pablo Gargallo4, Yania Yáñez4, Andrea Urtasun4, Jaime Font de Mora5, Victoria Castel4, Adela Cañete4, Salvador F Aliño1,2.
Abstract
The aim of this work was to supply an overview of the germline Pharmacogenetics that can be already implemented in the oncology clinical practice. An explanation of the three pillars considered necessary for determining which genetic polymorphisms should be used has been provided. These are PharmGKB single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-Drug Clinical Annotations with levels of evidence 1 or 2; the genetic information provided in the drug labels by the drug regulatory main agencies (Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency, mainly); and the guidelines elaborated by international expert consortia (mainly Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium and Dutch Pharmacogenetics Working Group). A summary of the relevant SNPs and the recommendations on how to apply their results has also been compiled.Entities:
Keywords: PharmGKB; Pharmacogenetic; Polymorphisms; clinical implementation; guidelines; oncology
Year: 2019 PMID: 35582138 PMCID: PMC9019171 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2018.25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Summary of the recommendations provided in CPIC and DPWG guidelines for drugs employed in oncology
| Drug | Gene | SNP | Reference genotype | Risk genotype | Guideline recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azathioprine, Mercaptopurine, Thioguanine# | CPIC[ | ||||
|
| rs1800462 | CC | CG, GG | Any Heterozygote, including 1/*3A (both risk variants located in the same allele): Consider a reduction starting at 30%-80% of the normal starting dose (if normal starting dose is equal or higher than 75 mg/m2/day, or equal or higher than 1.5 mg/kg/day in Mercaptopurine, and 2-3 mg/kg/day in Azathioprine). In the case of Thioguanine, start with 50%-80% of normal dose if it is equal or higher than 40-60 mg/m2/day. Allow 2-4 weeks to reach steady state after each dose adjustment | |
|
| rs116855232 | CC | CT, TT | ||
| Capecitabine, Fluorouracil# | CPIC/DPWG[ | ||||
|
| rs3918290 | CC | CT, TT | CT: Reduce dose by 50%. TT: Change to alternative agents | |
| rs55886062 | AA | AC, CC | AC: Reduce dose by 50%. CC: Change to alternative agents | ||
| rs3918290+ rs55886062 | CC + AA | CT, TT + AC, CC | Change to alternative agents | ||
| rs67376798 | TT | AT, AA | Reduce dose by 50% | ||
| rs67376798+ rs3918290 | TT + CC | AT, AA + CT, TT | Change to alternative agents | ||
| rs67376798+ rs55886062 | TT + AA | AT, AA + AC, CC | Change to alternative agents | ||
| rs75017182 | GG | CG, CC | Reduce dose by 50%. | ||
| rs75017182+ rs3918290 | GG + CC | CG, CC + CT, TT | Change to alternative agents | ||
| rs75017182+ rs55886062 | GG + AA | CG, CC + AC, CC | Change to alternative agents | ||
| Tegafur | DPWG[ | ||||
|
| rs3918290 | CC | CT, TT | Homozygotes for any Risk genotype or combination of two heterozygotes: select alternative drug. Fluorouracil or capecitabine are not suitable alternatives because both are also metabolized by DPD. Other variants are included in the guideline, but they are extremely rare[ | |
| rs72549303 | G/G | G/del, del/del | |||
| rs72549309 | ATGA/ATGA | ATGA/del, del/del | |||
| rs1801266 | GG | AG, AA | |||
| rs72549306 | CC | AC, AA | |||
| rs80081766+ rs78060119 | CC | CT, TT + AC, AA | |||
| rs55886062 | CC | AC, AA | |||
| rs1801265 | AA | AG, GG | |||
| rs1801268 | CC | AC, AA | |||
| Irinotecan | DPWG[ | ||||
|
| rs8175347 | (TA)6/(TA)6 | (TA)7/(TA)7 | Dose > 250 mg/m2: reduce initial dose by 30%. Increase dose in response to neutrophil count. Dose ≤ 250 mg/m2: no dose adjustment | |
| Ondansetron# | CPIC[ | ||||
|
| - | PM, IM, NM | UM: *1/*1xN, *1/*2xN, *2/*2xN | Select alternative drug not predominantly metabolized by CYP2D6 (i.e., granisetron) | |
| Oxycodone | DPWG[ | ||||
|
| NM | PM: two inactive alleles (*3-*8, *11-*16, *19-*21, *38, *40, *42); IM: two decreased-activity alleles (*9, *10, *17, *29, *36, *41) or carrying one active (*1, *2, *33, *35) and one inactive allele, or carrying one decreased-activity allele and one inactive allele | Select alternative drug (not tramadol or codeine) or be alert to insufficient efficacy | ||
| UM: gene duplication in absence of inactive (*3-*8, *11-*16, *19-*21, *38, *40, *42) or decreased-activity (*9, *10, *17, *29, *36, *41) alleles | Select alternative drug (not tramadol or codeine) or be alert to ADEs | ||||
| Tamoxifen | CPIC[ | ||||
|
| - | - | UM: *1/*1xN, *1/*2xN, *2/*2xN | Avoid moderate and strong CYP2D6 inhibitors. Initiate therapy with recommended standard of care dosing (tamoxifen 20 mg/day) | |
| - | - | NM: *1/*1, *1/*2, *1/*9, *1/*41, *2/*2 | Avoid moderate and strong CYP2D6 inhibitors. Initiate therapy with recommended standard of care dosing (tamoxifen 20 mg/day) | ||
| - | - | NM or IM (controversy remains): *1/*4, *1/*5, *41/*41; *4/*10, *4/*41, *5/*9; *10/*10, *10/*41 | Consider hormonal therapy such as an aromatase inhibitor for postmenopausal women or aromatase inhibitor along with ovarian function suppression in premenopausal women. If aromatase inhibitor use is contraindicated, consideration should be given to use a higher but FDA approved tamoxifen dose (40 mg/day). Avoid CYP2D6 strong to weak inhibitors | ||
| - | - | PM: *3/*4, *4/*4, *5/*5, *5/*6 | Recommend alternative hormonal therapy such as an aromatase inhibitor for postmenopausal women or aromatase inhibitor along with ovarian function suppression in premenopausal women given that these approaches are superior to tamoxifen regardless of | ||
| - | - | PM: see description in oxycodone | DPWG[ | ||
| - | - | IM: see description in oxycodone | Increased risk for relapse of breast cancer. Avoid concomitant use of CYP2D6 inhibitors. Consider aromatase inhibitor for postmenopausal women | ||
| Tramadol |
| PM: see description in oxycodone | DPWG[ | ||
| IM: see description in oxycodone | Be alert to decreased efficacy, consider dose increase. If still inadequate, do as PM | ||||
| UM: see description in oxycodone | Reduce dose by 30% and be alert to ADEs, or do as PM |
A summary of the published guidelines is shown in this table, translating the information to single SNPs when possible. The original guidelines, especially from CPIC, are much more extensive, so this table is only a comprehensive approach, useful for the majority of cases, but deeper details must be consulted in the original publications. #Applicable to pediatrics. Classical asterisks nomenclature: *1 is always considered the reference genotype. TPMT: *2 equivalent to rs1800462; *3A equivalent to *3B+*3C; *3B equivalent to rs1800460; *3C equivalent to rs1142345; *4 equivalent to rs1800584. NUDT15: *3 equivalent to rs116855232. UGT1A1: *28 equivalent to rs8175347 (this is not a real SNP, but a short tandem repeat polymorphism). DPYD at CPIC guideline: IM, one normal function + one no function, or one decreased function, or two decreased function alleles; PM, two no function, or one no function + one decreased function. No function: c.1905+1G>A equivalent to rs3918290 and DPYD*2A; c.1679 T>G equivalent to rs55886062 and DPYD*13; Decreased function: c.2846 A>T equivalent to rs67376798; c.1129-5923 C>G equivalent to rs75017182. CYP2D6: Date of access to CPIC-DPWG-PharmGKB for guidelines: 15 January 2019. ADE: Adverse Drug Event; UM: ultrarapid metabolizer; NM: normal metabolizer; IM: intermediate metabolizer; PM: poor metabolizer; CPIC: Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium; DPWG: Royal Dutch Association for the Advancement of Pharmacy - Pharmacogenetics Working Group; SNP: single nucleotide polymorphism
Summary of SNP-drug relevant associations according to PharmGKB and drug labels
| Drug | Gene | SNP | Reference Genotype | Risk Genotype | CA Level: D, E, T, Pk | Drug label | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azathioprine |
| rs7270101 | AA | AC, CC | 2B: T | T | Moderate risk of toxicity |
| Capecitabine |
| rs1801019 | GG, CG | CC | 2B: T | A | Moderate risk of toxicity |
| Carboplatin |
| rs11615 | GG | AA, AG | 2B: E, T | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity |
|
| rs3212986 | AA | AC, CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1695 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1801133 | AA | AG, GG | 2A: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs1800566 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs25487 | CC | CT, TT | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
| Cyclophosphamide |
| rs1695 | AA, AG | GG | 2A: E, T | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity |
|
| rs4880 | AA | AG, GG | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs1042522 | CC | CG, GG | 2B: E, T | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity | ||
| Cisplatin |
| rs11615 | GG | AA, AG | 2B: E, T | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity |
|
| rs3212986 | AA | AC, CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1695 | AA | AG,GG | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1800566 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs1042522 | CC | CG, GG | 2B: E, T | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity | ||
|
| rs2228001 | TT | GT, GG | 1B: T | High risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs25487 | CC | CT, TT | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
| Doxorubicin |
| rs1800566 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: E | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
| Etoposide |
| rs716274 | AA | AG, GG | 2B: T | I | Moderate risk of toxicity |
| Fentanyl,Metadone, Morphine,Opioids, Oxycodone, Tramadol |
| rs1045642 | AA, AG | GG | 2B: D, E | * | Moderate risk of inefficacy. |
| Fluorouracil |
| rs1695 | AG, GG | AA | 2A: E | A | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
|
| rs1042522 | CC | CG, GG | 2B: E, T | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity | ||
|
| rs1801019 | GG, CG | CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
| Irinotecan |
| rs1517114 | GG | CG, CC | 2B: T | A | Moderate risk of toxicity |
|
| rs7779029 | TT | CT, CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs4148323 | GG | GA, AA | 2A | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
| Methotrexate |
| rs1045642 | GG | AG, AA | 2A: T | I | Moderate risk of toxicity |
|
| rs4673993 | CC, TC | TT | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs1801133 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: D, E, T | Consider dose reduction | ||
|
| rs1801394 | AA | AG, GG | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs11045879 | CC | CT, TT | 2A: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
| Ondansetron |
| rs1045642 | AA | AG, GG | 2A: E | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
| Oxaliplatin |
| rs11615 | GG | AA, AG | 2B: E, T | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity |
|
| rs3212986 | AA | AC, CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1695 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
|
| rs1800566 | GG | AA, AG | 2A: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
|
| rs25487 | CC | CT, TT | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
| Paclitaxel |
| rs1042522 | CC | CG, GG | 2B: E, T | I | Moderate risk of inefficacy and toxicity |
| Rituximab |
| rs396991 | CC, AC | AA | 2B: E | T | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
| Tamoxifen |
| rs3892097 | CC, CT | TT | 2A: E | T | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
|
| rs3892097 | TT | CT, CC | 2A: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
| Tegafur |
| rs67376798 | TT | AA, AT | 1A: T, Pk | I | High risk of toxicity |
|
| rs1801019 | GG, CG | CC | 2B: T | Moderate risk of toxicity | ||
| Trastuzumab |
| rs1801274 | AA | AG, GG | 2B: E | T | Moderate risk of inefficacy |
|
| rs396991 | CC | AC, AA | 2B: E | Moderate risk of inefficacy | ||
| Vincristine |
| rs924607 | CC, CT | TT | 2B: T | I | Moderate risk of toxicity |
*As this line describes a group of drugs, no information from a single drug label can be provided. This table lists the SNPs with levels of evidence 1 and 2 for the chemotherapeutic drugs and some others frequently employed in cancer patients (ondansetron and some pain relief drugs), that still have not a published guideline with therapeutic recommendations. The information about the “reference” and “risk” genotypes, with the proposed implications if the patient bears the risk one is provided. “CA” column describes the level of evidence and the way in which the risk genotype affects the drug mechanism (D, dosage; E, efficacy; Pk, pharmacokinetics; T, toxicity) and what does the drug label (FDA or EMA) state about performing genetic tests when prescribing that drug (T, testing required or recommended; A, actionable; I, informative), not specifying genes or variants. SNPs related with a set of drugs have not been listed, this table only includes the genes and SNPs directly linked with each individual drug. Date of PharmGKB access 15 January 2019. SNPs: single nucleotide polymorphisms; CA: clinical annotation