학술논문

Leveraging large observational studies to discover genetic determinants of drug concentrations: A proof‐of‐concept study
Document Type
article
Source
Clinical and Translational Science, Vol 15, Iss 4, Pp 1063-1073 (2022)
Subject
Therapeutics. Pharmacology
RM1-950
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Language
English
ISSN
1752-8062
1752-8054
Abstract
Abstract Large, observational genetic studies are commonly used to identify genetic factors associated with diseases and disease‐related traits. Such cohorts have not been commonly used to identify genetic predictors of drug dosing or concentrations, perhaps because of the heterogeneity in drug dosing and formulation, and the random timing of blood sampling. We hypothesized that large sample sizes relative to traditional pharmacokinetic studies would compensate for this variability and enable the identification of pharmacogenetic predictors of drug concentrations. We performed a cross‐sectional, proof‐of‐concept association study to replicate the well‐established association between metoprolol concentrations and CYP2D6 genotype‐inferred metabolizer phenotypes in participants from the Montreal Heart Institute Hospital Cohort undergoing metoprolol therapy. Plasma concentrations of metoprolol and α‐hydroxymetoprolol (α‐OH‐metoprolol) were measured in samples collected randomly regarding the previous metoprolol dose. A total of 999 individuals were included. The metoprolol daily dose ranged from 6.25 to 400 mg (mean 84.3 ± 57.1 mg). CYP2D6‐inferred phenotype was significantly associated with both metoprolol and α‐OH‐metoprolol in unadjusted and adjusted models (all p