Showing posts with label pharmgkb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pharmgkb. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2024

The PharmGKB Blog has transitioned to the ClinPGx Blog

 

We have a brand new blog platform: the ClinPGx Blog.

PharmGKB, CPIC and PharmCAT are transitioning to a unified resource under the ClinPGx umbrella and will subsequently publish news to the ClinPGx Blog. This is the last post made on this blog site; all future posts will be found on https://blog.clinpgx.org. If you subscribe to announcements from the PharmGKB Blog, your subscription will be migrated to the new system automatically. You’ll also get the opportunity to sign up for announcements from other ClinPGx projects. More details are available on the ClinPGx Blog.

New blog posts will only appear on the ClinPGx Blog and previous PharmGKB Blog posts are also accessible there, so all posts can be obtained from one place. The PharmGKB Blog will remain online (but not updated) for as long as Blogger will allow. That means existing links to PharmGKB Blog posts will be maintained.

Thank you for your continued interest in PharmGKB, CPIC, PharmCAT and all the other projects we have written about on this blog. We are excited to keep sharing our work with you on the new ClinPGx Blog!

Thursday, February 29, 2024

ClinPGx 2024 Registration and Abstract Submission Open

 

REGISTRATION OPEN

In collaboration with CPIC, PharmGKB, PharmCAT and PharmVar, the Penn Institute for Biomedical Informatics will be hosting the ClinPGx 2024: Knowledge, Implementation, Education meeting on June 20th and 21st, 2024 in Philadelphia, PA. This meeting will provide educational content to cover all aspects of PGx implementation, including knowledgebases, implementation strategy, informatics, use of AI in precision medicine, clinical laboratory insights, and more.

Participants are invited to submit abstracts for the poster sessions. You must be registered for the meeting before your abstract will be accepted.

Please note breakfast & lunch will be provided all conference days.


Registration and detailed agenda


REMINDERS / DEADLINES:

March 22, 2024: Deadline for Abstract Submission. Abstract submission form link here.

April 30, 2024: Deadline for $350 Registration Fee (Starting May 1st, registration fee will be $450)

May 20, 2024: Deadline for Hotel Reservations. Click HERE for hotels offering special rates.

June 1, 2024: Deadline to register for the event.




Thursday, January 25, 2024

Release of Additional PharmGKB Pediatric Drug Summaries

A new round of PharmGKB's pediatric drug summaries is now available on PharmGKB under the Pediatric Focus.

To view the site with the focus active, please select the "Focus" button in the upper right-hand corner and toggle the "Pediatric Focus" setting.

Users can also access the Pediatric Focus on the Focus landing page, or by typing pediatric.pharmgkb.org

These pediatric drug summaries contain key information relevant to prenatal, postnatal, and pediatric populations, manually curated from PharmGKB annotations, pathways, CPIC guidelines, and FDA-approved drug labels.

Drugs with newly available summaries include:
PharmGKB continues to add to the list of drugs with pediatric summaries. To browse all drugs with available pediatric summaries, please check out the PharmGKB Pediatric Dashboard.

 

Monday, September 25, 2023

Disulfiram Pathway published in Pharmacogenetics and Genomics


Substance abuse disorders are a significant public health cost [PMID: 34453125]. Prescribers have limited choices for pharmaceutical therapies with only three FDA-approved choices for alcohol use disorder and zero for cocaine use disorder. Disulfiram is an FDA-approved treatment for alcohol use disorder which is also used for cocaine use disorder. There are some preliminary studies on the PGx of disulfiram but little replication.

PharmGKB together with Dr Aneysis De Las Mercedes Gonzalez (Stanford University School of Medicine), have published PharmGKB summary: disulfiram pathway in Pharmacogenetics and Genomics, 2023 Sep 21. doi: 10.1097/FPC.0000000000000509. Online ahead of print. PMID: 37728645. It summarizes the candidate genes involved in disulfiram PGx in pharmacokinetics and action in dopaminergic, seratonergic and noradrenergic neurons and highlights the knowledge gaps.

As always interactive versions of the diagrams with underlying linked evidence, are available on PharmGKB:

Disulfiram Pathway, Pharmacokinetics,

Disulfiram Pathway, Pharmacodynamics (Cocaine and Ethanol PK)

Disulfiram Pathway, Pharmacodynamics (Dopaminergic neuron)

Disulfiram Pathway, Pharmacodynamics (Serotonergic neuron)

Sympathetic Nerve Pathway (Neuroeffector Junction)

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Update to PharmGKB Pediatric Summaries - BPCA Drugs

The latest round of PharmGKB’s pediatric drug summaries is now live on PharmGKB pediatric. This release includes summaries for 55 drugs, bringing the total summary count to over 180, now including all drugs on the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) priority list in addition to all CPIC guideline drugs.

Drugs with new summaries include:
  • Alfentanil
  • Amiodarone
  • Ampicillin
  • Azithromycin
  • Bosentan
  • Cidofovir
  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Clindamycin
  • Clonidine
  • Dexmedetomidine
  • Digoxin
  • Doxycycline
  • Furosemide
  • Granisetron
  • Griseofulvin
  • Heparin
  • Hydralazine
  • Hydrochlorothiazide
  • Hydromorphone
  • Hydroxycobalamin
  • Hydroxyurea
  • Isotretinoin
  • Labetalol
  • Levofloxacin
  • Levothyroxine
  • Lidocaine
  • Lisinopril
  • Lithium
  • Lorazepam
  • Lurasidone
  • Meropenem
  • Metformin
  • Methylprednisolone
  • Midazolam
  • Molindone
  • Nafcillin
  • Nicardipine
  • Nifedipine
  • Nifurtimox
  • Olanzapine
  • Pentobarbital
  • Piperacillin-Tazobactam
  • Pralidoxime
  • Prednisolone
  • Sertraline
  • Sildenafil
  • Spironolactone
  • Terbutaline
  • Timolol
  • Topiramate
  • Tranexamic Acid
  • Valganciclovir
  • Vancomycin
  • Vecuronium

Monday, May 16, 2022

Response to the American Academy of Pediatrics' Statement "Eliminating Race-Based Medicine"

On May 2nd, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released a pre-published policy statement titled “Eliminating Race-Based Medicine,” noting that race is a “historically derived social construct that has no place as a biologic proxy.” The statement provides necessary and meaningful commentary on “the medical field’s history of inaccurate applications of race correction and adjustment factors” and calls for the overdue elimination of race-based medicine. We at PharmGKB applaud this statement and believe it is important to engage with this call as pharmacogenomics professionals who urge for the implementation of personalized medicine.

Looking forward in research, there is an urgent need to direct research efforts towards underserved populations to address the issues of health disparities. Additionally, clinical implementation of pharmacogenomics needs the development of truly race-agnostic dosing guidelines and algorithms.

The terms ‘race,’ ‘ethnicity,’ and ‘ancestry’ tend to be used interchangeably when discussing a person’s origins. However, there are distinct differences in their meanings. Race and ethnicity are generally accepted to be social and cultural constructs, respectively, and are not typically assigned based on the genetic information of patients. By comparison, ancestry is a biological construct rooted in genetics.

Race or ethnicity are typically disclosed via self-report at the discretion of the patient or visual assignation by a third party (e.g. clinician, healthcare administrator) and, as such, have little grounding in genetics. The assignment of race or ethnicity also brings significant socio-economic implications which are inherent to the use of these constructs. Moreover, it is an inadequate proxy for genetic ancestry that carries additional complications for transracial adoptees and multiracial patients, among others.

PharmGKB notes that the AAP’s recommendation that “professional organizations and medical specialty societies should identify and critically examine organizational policies and practice guidelines that may incorporate race or ethnicity as independent variables or modifying factors” is a relevant and current point of consideration within pharmacogenomics.

In 2018, PharmGKB replaced the Office of Management and Budget Standards (OMB) race and ethnicity categories used in their curation efforts with a biogeographical grouping system [PMID: 30506572]. While PharmGKB serves as a global resource, these OMB groups are US-centric and, as socio-cultural measures of identity, lack the capacity to capture the scale of global human diversity. The use of these biogeographical groups is intended to standardize and to ensure consistency in communications regarding the variability of pharmacogenetic allele frequencies.

Pharmacogenomics, like other areas within genetics, is impacted by the homogeneity of reference genomes. When dosing algorithms and polygenic risk scores are developed primarily in patients of one ancestry (typically European), differences in allele frequencies across populations may prevent these tools from benefiting populations not represented in the reference data. It’s important to recognize that individual medical experiences are shaped by many different factors, including genetic, socio-economic and geographical and that the collective experience of an underrepresented ancestry or ethnic population is likely to be overlooked or diminished by a relative lack of research in these groups. A greater focus on research in underrepresented populations is crucial to understanding how medical experiences can and do vary between communities, and allows us to meet and address a wider variety of medical needs. In terms of implementation of pharmacogenetic guidance, no study population can fully characterize an individual. 

Almost all CPIC guidelines are ancestry-agnostic. However, there is an exception with a complex history worth addressing, as well as a good example of the importance of expanding allele frequency research. Seminal work in warfarin pharmacogenomics focused on testing for CYP2C9*2 and *3, which are found at a frequency of 13% and 7.5% (respectively) in populations of European ancestry, with other alleles present at <1%. In populations of African ancestry, CYP2C9*2 and *3 alleles are instead found at a frequency of around 1-2% - the highest frequency reduced-function variant in this population is *8, and *5, *6, and *11 are also found at around or over 1% frequency (see the CYP2C9 allele frequency table). As such, in studies or implementation where only *2 and *3 were tested for, patients of African ancestry with these other alleles were likely not identified, and instead they were assigned a *1/*1 diplotype. This has resulted in confusing results, patients who unexpectedly required a decreased dose of warfarin, and reduced confidence in the capacity for genotyping to have the desired effect for the patients’ clinical response. Because of this, the CPIC guideline for CYP2C9, CYP4F2, VKORC1, and warfarin chose to stress the importance of testing for these alleles in populations with African ancestry. 

Yet, these alleles are not absent in other populations, and this approach also fails to acknowledge that patients with mixed ancestry may not identify as of African descent and that some patients may not know whether they have African ancestry. The CPIC guideline does provide optional guidance for patients without African ancestry with CYP2C9*5, *6, *8, and/or *11 that is similar to the guidance provided for patients with African ancestry, but only for patients who already have information for these alleles - and does not include recommendations for testing for these alleles in patients without African ancestry.

Currently, these alleles do not have differing effects based on the patient’s ancestry - the distinction is in the frequency, not the clinical implementation. Testing every patient for these alleles would be beneficial, even if only to catch the few patients in other populations and those with multiple or uncertain ancestries who also carry these alleles. It is, after all, called personalized medicine.

The CPIC guideline also refers specifically to the SNP rs12777823 in recommendations for African-American patients only (not all patients of African ancestry). This is the only guideline where it states not to use a genetic result in some individuals - “the data do not suggest an association between rs12777823 genotype and warfarin dose in non-African Americans, thus rs12777823 should not be considered in these individuals (even if available).”

This SNP is found across all populations (according to gnomAD v2.1.1), and has been stated to affect warfarin response in African-American patients [PMID: 26024874] [PMID: 26877068] [PMID: 28686080]. The mechanism by which this SNP affects warfarin response is unknown - the SNP is intergenic, but close to CYP2C18, and is largely assumed to be a marker in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with something else [PMID: 23755828]. While further study is needed, it’s unlikely that this SNP itself has a function in people of one genetic ancestry but not in others, and more likely that the frequency of LD with a mechanistic variant varies by populations. 

This call for race-agnostic pharmacogenetic clinical implementation is not limited to warfarin - several papers have been published discussing the U.S. Food & Drug Administration’s use of race as a limitation in recommendations for pharmacogenetic testing related to carbamazepine and allopurinol [PMID: 18840252] [PMID: 33492362]. This conversation is not a new one - from letters of support arguing against use of race to determine whether it is appropriate to test patients for HLA variants prior to initiating allopurinol therapy [PMID 30383575] to responses validating race-agnostic approaches to HLA genotyping [PMID: 30383576].

In summary, PharmGKB applauds the AAP’s statement calling for the elimination of race-based medicine. It is critical for the field of pharmacogenomics to examine how we can incorporate race-agnostic approaches to PGx implementation while acknowledging the critical importance of research in diverse populations to identify crucial PGx variants. Race-agnostic PGx implementation has the potential to meet a wider variety of individual medical needs, particularly with respect to underrepresented populations and those patients with non-monolithic ancestry, and it continues to be critical from a scientific standpoint to further expand our understanding of allele frequencies beyond Eurocentric frames of reference.

(For those interested in learning more, ClinGen’s Ancestry and Diversity working group, in collaboration with ELSIhub, are currently running a series of conversations on populations descriptors (i.e., race, ethnicity, and ancestry), and several of the speakers have pointed to the distinctions between these terms, particularly with respect to clinical genetics.)

Teri E. Klein (Principal Investigator of PharmGKB, CPIC, PharmCAT, and Stanford ClinGen)
Michelle Whirl-Carrillo (Co-Principal Investigator and Director of PharmGKB)
Li Gong
Rachel Huddart
Ingrid Keseler
Clarissa J. Klein
Binglan Li
Caroline F. Thorn
Matt W. Wright (Director, Stanford ClinGen)
Mark Woon

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Update to PharmGKB Pediatric Drug Summaries

The third round of PharmGKB's pediatric drug summaries is now live on PharmGKB pediatric. This release includes over 20 additional drugs with a focus on those on the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) priority list, including:

These pediatric drug summaries contain key information relevant to prenatal, postnatal, and pediatric populations, manually curated from PharmGKB annotations, pathways, CPIC guidelines, and FDA-approved drug labels.

PharmGKB continues to add to the list of drugs with pediatric summaries.

Monday, March 21, 2022

National Academy Seeking Public Feedback on Use of Population Descriptors in Genomics Research

 The National Academy's Committee on Use of Race, Ethnicity, and Ancestry as Population Descriptors in Genomics Research is now actively requesting public comments from those involved in genomics research about how they use descriptors like race, ethnicity, and ancestry as well as thoughts on potential improvements to usage. 

For those who would like to be considered as a potential speaker at their workshop on April 4th, the deadline for submission is March 23rd. Comments will be accepted until June 1st, 2022, and may be potentially considered for a summer workshop or use in the committee's final report.

We encourage PharmGKB and CPIC users to please provide their thoughts, in order to help the committee incorporate feedback from as many people as possible as they continue this important work.