scholarly journals Clinical pharmacogenomics and concept of personalized medicine / Klinička farmakogenomika i koncept personalizovane medicine

2012 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolina Babić

Summary The term »personalized medicine« (PM) was coined in the late 1990s, but was not introduced to general US public until about a decade later, through Genomics and Personalized Medicine Act. According to this act, PM is defined as any clinical practice model that utilizes genomic and family history information to customize diagnostic and therapeutic interventions and improve health outcomes. One of the emerging disciplines essential for implementation of PM is clinical pharmacogenomics (PGx), where patient’s genetic information is utilized to personalize drug therapy. PGx testing includes mostly detection of small DNA variations, such single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), insertions, and deletions in the genes encoding the drug transporters, receptors and metabolizing enzymes. By providing the right drug at the optimal dose to each patient, PGx promises to significantly improve drug efficacy and prevent adverse drug reactions. In the early 2000s, the US Food and Drug Administration joined scientists and laboratorians in their efforts to translate recent genetic advances into clinical practice by requiring the drug manufacturers to include genetic information on their product labels. To date several drugs including irinotecan, warfarin, abacavir and clopidogrel are labeled with the information relating different enzymatic polymorphisms with the adverse drug effects or the impaired drug efficacy. The majority of PGx testing involves SNP detection within the family of Cytochrome (CYP) P450 enzymes responsible for metabolism of most drugs, such as anti-depressants (e.g. CYP2D6) and anticoagulants (e.g. CYP2C9, 2C19) to name a few. PGx tests are still very low volume tests and it is not clear how and to what extent genotyping information is being utilized in the clinical practice, mostly due to the lack of outcome studies demonstrating the clinical utility of PGx testing. For instance, it is well known that approximately 30% of Caucasian population carries a polymorphic CYP2C9 allele that predisposes them to higher warfarin sensitivity and thus to increased bleeding risk. How - ever, there are no large, randomized outcome studies that conclusively demonstrate reduction of bleeding events or decrease in hospitalization rates in population dosed based on genotype information. The clinicians are thus reluctant to incorporate warfarin genotyping into their practice. Despite the attention PGx has received in recent years, the adoption of PGx into routine clinical testing is still far from being commonplace. The barriers to wider adoption and implementation of PGx include lack of education and understanding by prescribing physicians regarding the available tests, lack of consensus guidelines on interpretation and use of genotype results and scarcity of randomized controlled trials demonstrating the clinical utility of PGx testing. However, as ge netic testing is becoming increasingly patient driven thought di - rect-to-consumer testing, clinicians and laboratorians must continue to work toward full implementation of PGx testing into routine clinical practice.

2016 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-47
Author(s):  
Ben Chaffey ◽  
Angela Silmon

The rapidly developing field of personalized or precision medicine is moving clinical practice towards a new paradigm centred on ‘right patient – right medication – right time'. Such information is obtained through analysis of biomarkers, usually specific proteins or DNA sequences. To expand the range of conditions in which a precision approach can be used, it is vital that new biomarkers continue to be discovered and qualified as having clinical utility. Once this is achieved, it is just as important that clinically validated assays to measure these biomarkers are made available to clinical groups to guide prescribing practice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 475
Author(s):  
Joaquín Dopazo ◽  
Douglas Maya-Miles ◽  
Federico García ◽  
Nicola Lorusso ◽  
Miguel Ángel Calleja ◽  
...  

The COVID-19 pandemic represents an unprecedented opportunity to exploit the advantages of personalized medicine for the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, surveillance and management of a new challenge in public health. COVID-19 infection is highly variable, ranging from asymptomatic infections to severe, life-threatening manifestations. Personalized medicine can play a key role in elucidating individual susceptibility to the infection as well as inter-individual variability in clinical course, prognosis and response to treatment. Integrating personalized medicine into clinical practice can also transform health care by enabling the design of preventive and therapeutic strategies tailored to individual profiles, improving the detection of outbreaks or defining transmission patterns at an increasingly local level. SARS-CoV2 genome sequencing, together with the assessment of specific patient genetic variants, will support clinical decision-makers and ultimately better ways to fight this disease. Additionally, it would facilitate a better stratification and selection of patients for clinical trials, thus increasing the likelihood of obtaining positive results. Lastly, defining a national strategy to implement in clinical practice all available tools of personalized medicine in COVID-19 could be challenging but linked to a positive transformation of the health care system. In this review, we provide an update of the achievements, promises, and challenges of personalized medicine in the fight against COVID-19 from susceptibility to natural history and response to therapy, as well as from surveillance to control measures and vaccination. We also discuss strategies to facilitate the adoption of this new paradigm for medical and public health measures during and after the pandemic in health care systems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
Irina Lousa ◽  
Flávio Reis ◽  
Idalina Beirão ◽  
Rui Alves ◽  
Luís Belo ◽  
...  

The prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is increasing worldwide, and the mortality rate continues to be unacceptably high. The biomarkers currently used in clinical practice are considered relevant when there is already significant renal impairment compromising the early use of potentially successful therapeutic interventions. More sensitive and specific biomarkers to detect CKD earlier on and improve patients’ prognoses are an important unmet medical need. The aim of this review is to summarize the recent literature on new promising early CKD biomarkers of renal function, tubular lesions, endothelial dysfunction and inflammation, and on the auspicious findings from metabolomic studies in this field. Most of the studied biomarkers require further validation in large studies and in a broad range of populations in order to be implemented into routine CKD management. A panel of biomarkers, including earlier biomarkers of renal damage, seems to be a reasonable approach to be applied in clinical practice to allow earlier diagnosis and better disease characterization based on the underlying etiologic process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 154-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yejin Kim ◽  
Paul Rosenberg ◽  
Esther Oh

Background: Molecular imaging of brain amyloid for the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) using positron emission tomography (PET) has been approved for use in clinical practice by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) since 2012. However, the clinical utility and diagnostic impact of amyloid PET imaging remain controversial. We conducted a review of the recent studies investigating clinical utility of amyloid PET imaging with focus on changes in diagnosis, diagnostic confidence, and patient management. Summary: A total of 16 studies were included in the final analysis. Overall rate of changes in diagnosis after amyloid PET ranged from 9 to 68% (pooled estimate of 31%, 95% CI 23–39%). All studies reported overall increase in diagnostic confidence or diagnostic certainty after amyloid PET. Changes in patient management ranged from 37 to 87%; the most common type of change in management reported was either the initiation or discontinuation of planned AD medications. Key Messages: Amyloid PET imaging led to moderate to significant changes in diagnosis, diagnostic confidence, and subsequent patient management. It may be most useful in patients with high level of diagnostic uncertainty even after the completing the standard workup.


Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A Steinberg ◽  
DaJuanicia N Simon ◽  
Laine Thomas ◽  
Jack Ansell ◽  
Gregg C Fonarow ◽  
...  

Background: Non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants (NOACs) are effective at preventing stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). However, little is known about the frequency of major bleeds on NOACs and how these events are managed in clinical practice. Methods: We assessed the rates, management, and outcomes of ISTH major bleeding events among AF patients in the ORBIT-AF II registry (mean follow-up 213 days). Results: Overall, 103 patients experienced 110 major bleeding events during follow-up n=90/4986 (1.8%) on NOAC, and n=20/1320 (1.5%) on warfarin. Patients with bleeding events on NOAC were slightly younger than those on warfarin (median age 76 vs. 80; p=0.2). Among mutually-exclusive bleeding types, intracranial bleeding was more common in warfarin treated patients than NOAC-treated (15% vs 6.7%), whereas GI bleeding was more common on NOACs (56% vs. 40%, overall p=0.1 for bleeding type). Management of bleeding differed by anticoagulation type: blood products and reversal agents were more commonly used in patients on warfarin (Table). No patient received prothrombin complexes, recombinant factor VIIa, aminocaproic acid, tranexamic acid, aprotinin, or desmopressin. Out of 90 major bleeding events in NOAC patients, only 1 was fatal (1%). Within 30 days following bleeding, there were no strokes and 1 TIA (NOAC). Following a major bleed, the recurrent bleeding rate in NOAC patients in the next 30-days was 4% and the death rate was 4%. Conclusions: Rates of major bleeding with NOACs in clinical practice are comparable to those reported in clinical trials. Compared with warfarin, bleeding among NOAC users was less likely intracranial and more likely to be GI. Management of bleeding in the setting of NOAC rarely includes reversal agents.


Kardiologiia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 61 (11) ◽  
pp. 98-103
Author(s):  
O. M. Drapkina ◽  
A. A. Ivanova

Since the human genome was decoded more than 15 years ago, there has been a huge leap forward in the development of genomic and post-genomic technologies. Personalized medicine is engaged in implementing these technologies in clinical practice by developing new methods for risk assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of diseases taking into account individual features of the patient. Significant progress has been achieved in decoding genetic bases of chronic noninfectious diseases; new markers for the risk of complications and targets for effects of drugs are being searched for. This review highlights promising directions in the development of personalized medicine, the problems facing modern scientists, and possible ways to solve them


Depression ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 345-356
Author(s):  
Chad D. Rethorst

Beginning with epidemiological evidence and moving to randomized controlled trials, researchers have established evidence supporting the effectiveness of exercise in the treatment of depression. This chapter will provide an overview of the benefits of exercise for patients with depression, discuss the challenges clinicians face in using exercise as a treatment in clinical practice, and provide practical advice on exercise prescription. The chapter concludes with a discussion of areas of need for future research, focusing on three areas: identifying strategies to ensure patient adherence with exercise prescriptions, identifying predictors of treatment response that will facilitate a personalized medicine approach to exercise prescription, and the use of exercise as a complementary agent with other depression treatments.


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