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1.
Sci Transl Med ; 13(603)2021 07 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34290055

ABSTRACT

Pharmacogenomics is a key component of personalized medicine that promises safer and more effective drug treatment by individualizing drug choice and dose based on genetic profiles. In clinical practice, genetic biomarkers are used to categorize patients into *-alleles to predict CYP450 enzyme activity and adjust drug dosages accordingly. However, this approach leaves a large part of variability in drug response unexplained. Here, we present a proof-of-concept approach that uses continuous-scale (instead of categorical) assignments to predict enzyme activity. We used full CYP2D6 gene sequences obtained with long-read amplicon-based sequencing and cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D6-mediated tamoxifen metabolism data from a prospective study of 561 patients with breast cancer to train a neural network. The model explained 79% of interindividual variability in CYP2D6 activity compared to 54% with the conventional *-allele approach, assigned enzyme activities to known alleles with previously reported effects, and predicted the activity of previously uncharacterized combinations of variants. The results were replicated in an independent cohort of tamoxifen-treated patients (model R 2 adjusted = 0.66 versus *-allele R 2 adjusted = 0.35) and a cohort of patients treated with the CYP2D6 substrate venlafaxine (model R 2 adjusted = 0.64 versus *-allele R 2 adjusted = 0.55). Human embryonic kidney cells were used to confirm the effect of five genetic variants on metabolism of the CYP2D6 substrate bufuralol in vitro. These results demonstrate the advantage of a continuous scale and a completely phased genotype for prediction of CYP2D6 enzyme activity and could potentially enable more accurate prediction of individual drug response.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 CYP2D6 , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Alleles , Cytochrome P-450 CYP2D6/genetics , Genotype , Humans , Prospective Studies , Tamoxifen
2.
Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 107(3): 617-627, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31594036

ABSTRACT

For ~ 80 drugs, widely recognized pharmacogenetics dosing guidelines are available. However, the use of these guidelines in clinical practice remains limited as only a fraction of patients is subjected to pharmacogenetic screening. We investigated the feasibility of repurposing whole exome sequencing (WES) data for a panel of 42 variants in 11 pharmacogenes to provide a pharmacogenomic profile. Existing diagnostic WES-data from child-parent trios totaling 1,583 individuals were used. Results were successfully extracted for 39 variants. No information could be extracted for three variants, located in CYP2C19, UGT1A1, and CYP3A5, and for CYP2D6 copy number. At least one actionable phenotype was present in 86% of the individuals. Haplotype phasing proved relevant for CYP2B6 assignments as 1.5% of the phenotypes were corrected after phasing. In conclusion, repurposing WES-data can yield meaningful pharmacogenetic profiles for 7 of 11 important pharmacogenes, which can be used to guide drug treatment.


Subject(s)
Exome Sequencing/methods , Pharmacogenetics/methods , Pharmacogenomic Testing/methods , Cohort Studies , DNA Copy Number Variations , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Pharmaceutical Preparations/administration & dosage , Phenotype , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies
3.
Hum Mutat ; 38(3): 310-316, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28044414

ABSTRACT

Cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) is among the most important genes involved in drug metabolism. Specific variants are associated with changes in the enzyme's amount and activity. Multiple technologies exist to determine these variants, like the AmpliChip CYP450 test, Taqman qPCR, or Second-Generation Sequencing, however, sequence homology between cytochrome P450 genes and pseudogene CYP2D7 impairs reliable CYP2D6 genotyping, and variant phasing cannot accurately be determined using these assays. To circumvent this, we sequenced CYP2D6 using the Pacific Biosciences RSII and obtained high-quality, full-length, phased CYP2D6 sequences, enabling accurate variant calling and haplotyping of the entire gene-locus including exonic, intronic, and upstream and downstream regions. Unphased diplotypes (Roche AmpliChip CYP450 test) were confirmed for 24 of the 25 samples, including gene duplications. Cases with gene deletions required additional specific assays to resolve. In total, 61 unique variants were detected, including variants that had not previously been associated with specific haplotypes. To further aid genomic analysis using standard reference sequences, we have established an LOVD-powered CYP2D6 gene-variant database, and added all reference haplotypes and data reported here. We conclude that our CYP2D6 genotyping approach produces reliable CYP2D6 diplotypes and reveals information about additional variants, including phasing and copy-number variation.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 CYP2D6/genetics , Genetic Variation , Sequence Analysis, DNA , DNA Copy Number Variations , Gene Deletion , Gene Duplication , Genotype , Humans , Translocation, Genetic
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