Clinical use of pharmacogenomic tests in 2009.
2009; National Institutes of Health; Linguagem: Inglês
Autores
Leslie J. Sheffield, Hazel Phillimore,
Tópico(s)Pharmacovigilance and Adverse Drug Reactions
ResumoPharmacogenomics is a new field where testing an individual can define either a risk status for an adverse event, or the rate of metabolism of a drug. This is achieved by the categorisation of the enzyme activity or documenting genetic polymorphisms of a metabolising enzyme. The best example of risk status assessment is the recent finding that HLA-B typing a person can predict whether they are at risk of a severe skin reaction from the drug abacavir. Those patients showing HLA-B*5701, who are being considered for abacavir therapy, can be prevented from developing potentially toxic epidermal necrosis (TEN) or Stevens-Johnson Syndrome by avoiding abacavir. The evidence for HLA-B typing for allopurinol and carbamazepine has also been described. Most other pharmacogenomic tests are of drug metabolising enzymes, which can either be assessed using "probe" drugs and measuring a ratio of parent drug to metabolite, or, by genetic testing for polymorphisms of the genes. In practice, testing is usually done by molecular testing, but this typically does not detect all polymorphisms. This article briefly reviews the evidence for the utilisation of pharmacogenomics for antidepressant drugs, tamoxifen, codeine, warfarin, azathioprine, clopidogrel, omeprazole, tacrolimus and irinotecan. There are few pharmacogenomics tests being carried out in practice, as there has not been a wide appreciation of their use, and only limited evidence exists for many individual drugs. It is expected that utilisation will increase as more evidence becomes available and there is a wider understanding of the existing evidence by the medical profession.
Referência(s)