Genomics and Drug Response - New England J Med March 24, 2011

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Genomics and Drug Response - New England J Med March 24, 2011

 

Wang L, McLeod HL, Weinshilboum RM. Genomics and drug response. N Engl J Med 2011 Mar 24;364(12):1144-1153. (Editorial)
PMID: 21428770
 
 
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Genomic Medicine
W. Gregory Feero, M.D., Ph.D., Editor, Alan E. Guttmacher, M.D., Editor

Genomics and Drug Response
Liewei Wang, M.D., Ph.D., Howard L. McLeod, Pharm.D., and Richard M. Weinshilboum, M.D.
N Engl J Med 2011; 364:1144-1153  March 24, 2011

Pharmacogenomics is the study of the role of inherited and acquired genetic variation in drug response.1 Clinically relevant pharmacogenetic examples, mainly involving drug metabolism, have been known for decades, but recently, the field of pharmacogenetics has evolved into "pharmacogenomics," involving a shift from a focus on individual candidate genes to genomewide association studies. Such studies are based on a rapid scan of markers across the genome of persons affected by a particular disorder or drug-response phenotype and persons who are not affected, with tests for association that compare genetic variation in a case-control setting.2 An example is provided in this issue of the Journal: McCormack and colleagues, testing for genomewide association, identified an HLA allele that is associated with hypersensitivity reactions to the anticonvulsant and mood-stabilizing drug carbamazepine in persons of European descent.3 Pharmacogenomics facilitates the identification of biomarkers that can help physicians optimize drug selection, dose, and treatment duration and avert adverse drug reactions. In addition, pharmacogenomics can provide new insights into mechanisms of drug action and as a result can contribute to the development of new therapeutic agents.

In 2003, two reviews of pharmacogenetics were published the
 Journal.4,5 Since then, both genomic science and its application to drug response have undergone major advances.6 Here we review some of those advances, with an emphasis on discovery through genomewide association studies. We describe examples that highlight principles of pharmacogenomics that are relevant to a wide variety of drugs. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has altered drug labels and issued warnings about pharmacogenomic variation affecting drug response, raising the issue of the level of evidence required to show clinical utility7 and the respective roles of regulatory agencies such as the FDA and of academic and professional societies in the evaluation of pharmacogenetic analyses for the clinic.

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