Dong OM, Li A, Suzuki O, Oni-Orisan A, Gonzalez R, Stouffer GA, Lee CR, Wiltshire T. Projected impact of a multigene pharmacogenetic test to optimize medication prescribing in cardiovascular patients. Pharmacogenomics. 2018 Jun 1;19(9):771-82. doi: 10.2217/pgs-2018-0049


AIM: To determine the projected impact of a multigene pharmacogenetic (PGx) test on medication prescribing.

MATERIALS & METHODS: A retrospective analysis was conducted with 122 cardiac catheterization laboratory patients undergoing angiography for eligibility of potential PGx-guided interventions that could have occurred if multigene PGx information was pre-emptively available at the time of the procedure. Medication data and presence of actionable at-risk genotypes were used to determine eligibility of a PGx intervention.

RESULTS: 20% of the study population (n = 24) would have qualified for at least one PGx-based medication intervention per US FDA or Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) guidelines within 6 months of their cardiac catheterization procedure. Commonly encountered gene-drug pairs for these interventions included: CYP2C19 for clopidogrel and antidepressants, CYP2D6 for antidepressants and codeine, SLCO1B1 for simvastatin, and VKORC1/CYP2C9 for warfarin.

CONCLUSION: Pre-emptive use of a multigene PGx test in the cardiac catheterization laboratory offers potential to reduce adverse medication outcomes.

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