T5: Pharmacogenetics Flashcards
1
Q
What is pharmacogenetics?
A
- The study of inherited genetic differences in drug metabolic pathways which can affect an individuals response to drugs.
- These differences may result in a positive response to a drug therapy or an adverse drug reaction.
- Plays an important role in offering a stratified medicine approach to improve patient care.
2
Q
What genetic variations affect drug metabolism?
A
- Altered outcome to treatment
- Gene amplification
- Promoter polymorphisms
- Translocations
- Deletions, Insertions
- Single Nucleotide Polymorphism
3
Q
What effects can genetic variation have?
A
- Absorption
- Activation
- Altered target
- Catabolism (breakdown)
- Excretion
4
Q
What patients can benefit from Trastuzumab?
A
20% of breast cancers have over-expression of HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2)
These patients benefit significantly from trastuzumab (Herceptin) – a monoclonal antibody to the HER2 receptor.
5
Q
What patients can benefit from BRAF targeted therapy?
A
- Melanoma is notoriously resistant to chemotherapy treatment
- ~50% of melanomas have a somatic mutation in the BRAF gene
- A new targeted therapy Vemurafenib recently showed a 48% reponse rate compared with 5% for standard chemotherapy
6
Q
Other examples of use of pharmacogenetics.
A
- Thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) – enzyme that inactivates certain drugs e.g. Azathioprine
- Ivacaftor - Cystic Fibrosis (CFTR gene variants)
Succinylcholine - Muscle relaxant used in anaesthesia (to stop breathing) - Aminoglycoside induced hearing loss - (MT-RNR1 gene variants)
- Warfarin – anti-coagulant (affected by VKOR gene variants)