Title: Warfarin Dosing
1Warfarin Dosing
- In August 2007, the FDA updated the warfarin
prescribing guidelines to include genetic
testing. - SNP assessment in CYP2C92 and CYP2C93
- SNP assessment in VKORC1
2Pharmacogenetics Drug Safety
3Financial Disclosure
- I have no actual or potential conflict of
interest in relation to this program.
4Learning Objectives
- Compare and contrast pharmacogenetics and
pharmacogenomics - Demonstrate and understanding of basic DNA
terminology and genomic variations - Explain personalized medicine from the
standpoint of drug metabolism, bioactivation, and
pharmacologic target screening
5Learning Objectives
- Describe the limitations to implementing
pharmacogenetic screening in health care - Apply knowledge of pharmacogenetics to the
initiation of warfarin therapy - Apply single nucleotide polymorphisms data to
patient dosing
6Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics
- Early history
- 1931
- Sir Archibald Garrot
- 1954
- During WWII, American soldiers developed severe
hemolytic anemia after taking primaquine. - later shown to result from a deficiency in
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD)
7Introduction and Background
- 1954
- individuals who experienced peripheral neuropathy
in response to the anti-tubuculosis drug
isoniazid - lacked the ability to metabolize the drug
- 1956
- prolonged neuromuscular blockade following normal
doses of succinylcholine - resulted from a deficiency in psuedocholinesterase
activity - In each case, an inherited genetic trait was
linked to an abnormal drug response!
8Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
- generally defined as
- the study of the relationship between genetics
and drug effect - the application of genetic analysis to predict
drug response, efficacy, and toxicity
9Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
- Key differences
- pharmacogenetics
- focused on variation in individual, specific
genes that influence the response to a drug - associated with
- a large clinical effect
- mutation in a single gene
- affects a relatively small number of individuals
10Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
- Key differences
- pharmacogenomics
- focused on variation in a large collection of
genes, up to the whole genome, that influence
response to a drug - associated with
- smaller clinical effect
- involves many mutations or multiple variants
- affects many individuals within a population
11Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
12Introduction and Background
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
- The promise is personalized medicine!
- Drug therapy tailored to a patients unique
genetic makeup - choice of the drug
- choice of the dosing regimen
13Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Pharmacogenetics vs. Pharmacogenomics
- Concept of pharmacogenetics
- based on several factors
- Most current medications are associated with a
significant risk for drug toxicity and drug
inefficacy - Variability of drug response
- Genetic variation
14Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Drug toxicity
- Adverse drug reactions (ADRs)
- Each year in the U.S.
- 137 billion due to drug-related morbidity and
mortality - Two million (6) hospitalized patients experience
a serious ADRs - 106,000 (0.32) hospitalized patients have fatal
ADRs - ADRs rank as the fourth-leading cause of death in
the U.S. - 50 of ADRs in hospitals have no readily
discernible or preventable cause - 16 (193) of pharmaceuticals carry a black box
warning
15Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Drug inefficacy
- Response rates vary markedly across therapeutic
areas - Estimated response rates
-
- 80 - analgesics 25 - cancer chemotherapy
- 30 - Alzheimers disease 60 - depression
(SSRIs) - 40 - incontinence 47 - HIV
- 50 - rheumatoid arthritis 60 - schizophrenia
- 50 - migraine (prophylaxis) 52 - migraine
(acute) - 57 - diabetes 60 - asthma
- 60 - cardiac arrhythmias
- Overall, 50 of patients do not respond to drugs
in the major therapeutic classes
16Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Variability of drug response
- Response to a drug is influenced by both
environmental and genetic factors
17Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Variability of drug response
- Genetics
- contribution of genetic factors to a drug
response can be estimated using twin studies
18Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Variability of drug response
- Genetic factors
- 75 - 85 of variability in drug half-lives is
inherited
19Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Variability of drug response
- Genetic factors
- current drugs act on 500 molecular targets
- 45 - receptors
- 28 - enzymes
- 11 - hormones and related factors
- 5 - ion channels
- 2 - nuclear receptors
20Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Genetic variation
- DNA
- DNA is comprised of a string of 4 nucleotide
bases - A, G, T and C
- Matched A-T and C-G
- Genes
- A segment of DNA containing all of the
information needed to encode for one protein is
called a gene.
5-CATGTACCTGGGCCG-3 3-GTACATGGACCCGGG-5
21Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Genetic variation
- Chromosomes
- Every human cell with the exception of gametes
contains 23 chromosomes - ? are diploid (two copies XX)
- ? are haploid (one copy each XY)
- Carry all the genetic coding for all the proteins
in every cell - Consist of DNA tightly wound around special
protein structures called histones
22Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Genetic variation
- DNA
- Genes
- Chromosomes
23Zipped Files
Decompression
Executable Files
24Transcription Translation
25Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Genetic variation
- Sequencing of the human genome (2003)
- Some things we learned
- 3.2 billion base pairs
- 30,000 genes (estimated)
- 1 contained in exons
- 24 in introns
- 75 is intergenic
- All human beings share 99.9 DNA sequence
- diversity at the genetic level is encoded by 0.1
variation in our DNA
26Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Genetic Variation
- Determining genetic differences between
individuals - Polymorphisms
- Common variation in DNA
- often defined as greater than 1 in a given
population - Occur on average every 1331 bp
- frequency can be much greater in a given gene.
- Estimated to be 11 million polymorphisms in the
genome
27Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Polymorphisms
- Two main types
- SNPs polymorphisms that occur at a single
nucleotide - Can be located in either coding regions (DNA that
is transcribed occur less frequently) or
non-coding regions - Coding polymorphisms are further classified as
- Non-synonymous (missense) results in
translation of a different amino acid - Synonymous (sense) results in translation of
the same amino acid - Nonsense results in the insertion of a stop
codon
28Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Polymorphisms
- SNPs
- Non-coding polymorphisms
- when located in promoters, introns, or other
regulatory regions may alter transcription factor
binding, mRNA transcript stability or RNA
splicing
29Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Polymorphisms
- Two main types
- Coding Non-coding SNPs
30Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Polymorphisms
- Indels
- insertion or deletion of multiple nucleotides
- commonly result in gene insertions, duplications
or deletions
31Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Polymorphisms (mainly SNPs) are used to
characterize genetic differences between
individuals - However,
- a pharmacogenetic trait cannot be linked to just
one SNP - In this case, haplotypes can be used to associate
a genotype with a phenotype
32Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Haplotypes
- Defined as
- Group of SNPs located closely together on a
chromosome - are inherited together
- Most genes contain between 2 and 53 haplotypes
- avg. 14
- Haplotypes themselves may not have a direct
effect on drug response - their proximity to a causative SNP allows them to
act as a marker for a particular drug response
33Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Haplotypes
- Haplotypes themselves may not have a direct
effect on drug response - their proximity to a causative SNP allows them to
act as a marker for a particular drug response
Haplotype
chromosome
SNP
34Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Haplotypes
- ß2 adrenergic receptor haplotypes
- 12 haplotypes identified in the 5 UTR and open
reading frame - Several haplotypes are associated with gt 2-fold
increase in response to albuterol - Individual SNPs within the haplotypes were not!
35Basis for Pharmacogenetics
- Haplotypes
- Both SNPs and haplotypes can be used to map
genetic changes associated with a drug response
36Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Drug metabolism
- Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT)
- The TPMT gene is located on chromosome 6
- The main function of TPMT is to catalyze the
S-methylation of the immunosuppressants
azathioprine and 6-mercaptopurine - Used in
- prevention of acute rejection in transplant
recipients - Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) particularly
Europe - acute lymphoblastic anemia (6-mercaptopurine)
37Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Drug metabolism
- Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT)
- Four major SNPs correlate to a loss of enzyme
activity - TPMT3A, TPMT3B, TPMT3C
- TPMT3A accounts for 85 of mutated alleles
- Encompasses two SNPs
- G460A (A154T) and A719G (Y240L)
38Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Drug metabolism
- Thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT)
- 0.3 of individuals are homozygous for TMPT
deficiency - 10 are heterozygous individuals and show an
intermediate phenotype - Patients with TPMT deficiency
- Increased risk for severe hematopoeitic toxicity
if treated with conventional doses of thiopurines!
39Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Drug metabolism
- The CYP Families
- proportion of drugs metabolized by the major P450
enzymes
40Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2D6
- The gene is located on chromosome 22
- Nearly 100 drugs are substrates for this enzyme
- ß-adrenergic blockers Antidepressants Neuroleptic
s - metoprolol amitriptyline haloperidol
- propanolol clomipramine resperidone
- desipramine thoridazine
- Antiarrhythmics fluoxetine
- encainide fluvoxamine Others
- sparteine imipramine codeine
- flecainide nortryptaline dextramethophan
- propafenone paroxetine tramadol
41Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2D6 polymorphisms
- poor metabolizer (PM) phenotypes
- CYP2D63 A2637 del (frameshift)
- CYP2D64 G1934A (splicing defect)
- most common in Caucasian populations
- CYP2D65 Gene deletion (no enzyme)
- CYP2D610 C188T
- most common in Asian populations
- CYP2D64 is almost completely absent in this
group - CYP2D617 C1111T
- most common in African populations
42Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2D6 duplication
- extensive metabolizer (EM) phenotype
- repetition of a 42 kb XbaI fragment containing
the CYP2D62 gene that results in 2-13 copies of
the enzyme - the frequency of individuals possessing CYP2D6
duplication suggests a geographical gradient,
possibly resulting from dietary pressures - 1 - Sweden
- 4 - Germany
- 7-10 - Spain
- 10 - Italy
- 30 - Ethopians
43Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
44Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2C19
- Only two SNPs have been identified thus far
CYP2C192 and CYP2C193 - Each results in a non-functional protein product
- individuals homozygous for either CYP2C192 or
CYP2C193 have no functional enzyme - results in increased drug levels and improved
therapeutic outcome
45Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2C19
- CYP2C192 and CYP2C193
46Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2C9
- Encodes the p450 enzyme that metabolizes the
anticoagulant warfarin - Warfarin
- most widely prescribed oral agent for the
treatment of thromboembolic diseases - antagonist at vitamin K epoxide reductase
- required to maintain levels of reduced vitamin K,
which allows carboxylation of glutamate receptors
on coagulation factors - wide inter-individual variability in therapeutic
efficacy - 0.5 mg/day 50 mg/day
- underdosing leaves patients at risk for clotting
while overdosing increases the risk for
hemorrhaging
47Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- CYP2C9
- 200 polymorphisms have been identified in CYP2C9
- 30 coding region variants
- CYP2C92
- most common in Caucasian populations
- CYP2C93
- most common across all ethnicities
- individuals with either CYP2C92 or CYP2C93
exhibit increasing sensitivity to warfarin - greatest sensitivity if homozygous for CYP2C93
- 23 haplotypes have been identified within CYP2C9
- only the 2 or 3 SNPs are associated with
increased warfarin sensitivity
48Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Vitamin K oxidoreductase (VKORC1)
- molecular target of warfarin
- 27 SNPs identified in VKORC1 that are contained
within 5 different haplotypes - Based on haplotypes, 2 phenotypically distinct
groups were identified (A or B) - AA require 3 mg/day warfarin
- BB require 7 mg/day warfarin
- polymorphisms in VKORC1 account for 20 30 of
warfarin sensitivity
49Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Warfarin Dosing
- In August 2007, the FDA updated the warfarin
prescribing guidelines to include genetic
testing - VKROC1 and CYP2C9
50Pharmacogenetics in Drug Therapy
- Warfarin Dosing
- Pharmacokinetics
- racemic mixture of R and S isomers
- S 5X more potent than R
- S-warfarin is transformed by CYP2C9 R-warfarin
is mainly transformed by CYP1A2 - rapidly absorbed by GI tract with high
bioavailability - plasma concentrations peak approximately 90
minutes after administration - half-life 36-42 hours, binds to plasma proteins
(mainly albumin)
51Example dosing table for warfarin based on SNP
type
52Pharmacogenetic Influence in Therapeutics
- Pharmacogenetics has been slow to be implemented
clinically - As of 2003, 51 drugs contain pharmacogenetic-relat
ed information on their product label
53Pharmacogenetic Influence in Therapeutics
- Limitations
- Cost
- Existing DNA sequencing technology makes genetic
screening inherently expensive - Who is responsible for the cost burden associated
with genotyping - patient, government, or insurance company?
- influence on drug development
- CYP2D6-metabolized drugs
- Potential emotional and financial liability
associated with genetic information - Availability and timeliness of genetic testing
54Pharmacogenetic Influence in Therapeutics
- However
- Recent study suggests a tremendous interest among
patients and clinicians for pharmacogenetics to
be more involved in therapeutic decision making - In U.S.
- 80 viewed genetically-guided personalized
medicine favorably - 50 are willing to undergo genetic testing to
determine medications used in therapy - March 2005, FDA officially encouraged
pharmacogenomic data to be submitted with drug
approval application materials
55Dedicated Bench-top DNA Detection System
Rx Consumer Kiosk
Patient Information Results Presentation Prescript
ion Support Consumer Education
1
3 and 4
2
56Warfarin Dosing
- In August 2007, the FDA updated the warfarin
prescribing guidelines to include genetic
testing. - SNP assessment in CYP2C92 and CYP2C93
- SNP assessment in VKORC1
571.) Pharmacogenomics is the study of the
relationship between genetic variation and drug
responses in many individuals within a
population.
582.) Polymorphisms in which metabolic enzyme
activity is associated with both poor metabolizer
(PM) and extensive metabolizer (EM) phenotypes?
593.) The promise of personalized medicine is to
tailor drug therapy, including drug choice and
dosing regimen, based on a patients unique
genetic makeup.
604.) Each of the following are limitations to
implementing pharmacogenetic screening in health
care EXCEPT
- Cost
- Privacy
- Speed/availability of genetic testing
- Patient support