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Kim Dolan Sales Trainer for PGXL Laboratories 502-836-3361 The Human Genome © 2009 - 2014 PGXL Laboratories Human Genome Research Initiative “As important a breakthrough as understanding human anatomy” Francis Collins, Director National Institutes of Health Goals • Determine the sequence of chemical pairs that make up Human DNA • Identify and map the 25,000 genes and 3.1 million base pairs of the human genome from a physical and functional standpoint • Understand genes and how they work to understand how diseases are caused and how best to cure them • Switch from reacting to a disease to prevention Evolution of Pharmacogenetics PGXL Founders Are Pioneers in the Field • 1988 – International Human Genome Initiative (HGRI) launched • 1989 – Dr. Roland Valdes launches post-PhD Molecular Clinical Chemistry program • 1993 – Dr. Francis Collins assumes leadership of HGRI • 1997 – Dr. Valdes and Dr. Mark Linder publish seminal pharmacogenetics paper Continued… Evolution of Pharmacogenetics PGXL Founders Are Pioneers in the Field • 2001 – PGXL Laboratories is first CLIA-certified pharmacogenetics specialist in U.S. • 2004 – Human genome sequenced and published • 2010 – Drs. Valdes and Linder publish guidelines for operating a pharmacogenetics laboratory …Continued Pharmacogenetics Why It Matters 1. There can be wide variability in patient response to commonly prescribed medications 2. Genetics is estimated to account for 20-95% of the variability in drug effects 3. Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) are the 6th leading cause of death 4. A review of drugs most commonly associated with ADRs found that 57% (16 of 27) were metabolized by a gene with a known genetic polymorphism Current Situation/Implications 57% of meds in top 20 list causing ADRs are linked to a genetic variation 20-90% variability in patient response to medications can be explained by genetics >120 drugs have FDA box warnings related to genetics Lazarou et al. JAMA 1998; 279:1200-1205; Phillips KA et al JAMA 2001;286:2270-2279; Kalow W et al. Pharmacogenetics 1998;8:283-289 Pharmacogenetics Same Diagnosis, Same Medications, Different Outcomes Typical Clinic Day N=30 No Variance Variance Variance Variance Normal Response Risk Decreased Lack of Efficacy High Risk Pharmacogenetics The Study of How Our Genes Affect Our Response to Drugs • Every human has a genetic code that is unique to them • There is no perfect version of the code; we all have variants • Variances in genes responsible for drug metabolism, transport and uptake/binding can: o Be of no consequence to the drug’s safety and efficacy o Render a medication useless o Result in a medication causing serious adverse reactions Incidence of Genetic Variants Important to Drug Selection and Drug Dose Gene % of Extensive Metabolizers % of Intermediate Metabolizers 2D6 2C19 2C9 VKOR 3A4 3A5 SLC6A4 53% 36% 57% 35% 32% 40% 10% 4% 3% 2% 28% NA 87% 1% 25% 12% 18% 50% 1% 81% 25% N/A N/A N/A % of Poor % of Ultra-Rapid Metabolizers Metabolizers 1. Pharmacogenetics Knowledge Base Implementation: www.pharmgkb.org VARIANTS 47% 64% 43% >70% 13% 99% 75% Property of PGxl Laboratories Leading ADRs resulting in hospitalizations Drug group/drug No (%) of cases NSAIDs 363 (29.6) Diuretics 334 (27.3) Warfarin 129 (10.5) Individual drugs Aspirin (218), diclofenac (52), ibuprofen (34), rofecoxib (33), celecoxib (8), ketoprofen (6) naproxen (5) Furosemide (128), bendroflumethiazide (103), bumetanide (43), spironolactone (37), amiloride (19), metolazone (11), indapamide (6) — ACE inhibitors/All receptor antagonists 94 (7.7) Antidepressants 87 (7.1) β blockers 83 (6.8) Opiates 73 (6.0) Digoxin 36 (2.9) Ramipril (28), enalaparil (25), captopril (12), lisinopril (9), irbesartan (6), losartan (5), perindopril (4) Fluoxetine (17), paroxetine (14), amitriptyline (13), citalopram (9), lithium (8), venlafaxine (8) dosulepin (7) Atenolol (69), propranolol (6), sotalol (3), bisoprolol (2), metoprolol (2), carvedilol (1) Morphine (20), dihydrocodeine (20), co-codamol (8), tramadol (8), co-dydramol (6), fentanyl (5) — Prednisolone 31 (2.5) — Clopidogrel 29 (2.4) — Pirmohamed et al. BMJ 2004;329(7456):15–9. Adverse reactions GI bleeding, peptic ulceration, haemorrhagic cerebrovascular accident, renal impairment, wheezing, rash Renal impairment, hypotension, electrolyte disturbances, gout GI bleeding, haematuria, high INR, haematoma Renal impairment, hypotension, electrolyte disturbance, angioedema Confusion, hypotension, constipation, GI bleed, hyponataemia Bradycardia, heart block, hypotension, wheezing Constipation, vomiting, confusion, urinary retention Symptomatic toxic digoxin levels Gastritis, GI bleeding, hyperglycaemia, osteoporotic fracture GI bleeding State-of-the-Art -- 2014 Cardiovascular Anti-Platelet Activation Anti-Coagulation Behavioral Health Pain Management Treatment Resistant Depression Schizophrenia Opioids Benefits of Molecular PGx Guided Therapy Decision Making Patient Improvement Cost Savings Patient Satisfaction & Compliance Risk Reduction CIPHER™ strength of evidence CV Antiplatelet therapy Anticoagulation management Hyperlipidemia Hypertension/arrhythmia Pain Opioids NSAIDs Muscle relaxants Behavioral Health Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) Psychosis ADHD Internal Med/GP Antithrombotic therapies CV health (arrhythmia, lipids, stroke) Chronic pain management Type II diabetes management GU health Antimicrobials Multidrug sensitivity Oncology (under development) Colorectal cancer (KRAS, BRAF, Lynch) Breast cancer (tamoxifen) Lung Cancer (EGFR, etc) Property of PGxl Laboratories Personalized Medicine Program PM Program Core Team Creation PGxl & Client Track and Modify Program Launch and Support Program Project Planning Meeting Schedule Design Program