학술논문

Pharmacogenetic studies of long-acting beta agonist and inhaled corticosteroid responsiveness in randomised controlled trials of individuals of African descent with asthma
Document Type
article
Author
Ortega, Victor EDaya, MichelleSzefler, Stanley JBleecker, Eugene RChinchilli, Vernon MPhipatanakul, WandaMauger, DaveMartinez, Fernando DHerrera-Luis, EstherPino-Yanes, MariaHawkins, Gregory AAmpleford, Elizabeth JKunselman, Susan JCox, CoreyBacharier, Leonard BCabana, Michael DCardet, Juan CarlosCastro, MarioDenlinger, Loren CEng, CelesteFitzpatrick, Anne MHolguin, FernandoHu, DongleiJackson, Daniel JJarjour, NizarKraft, MonicaKrishnan, Jerry ALazarus, Stephen CLemanske, Robert FLima, John JLugogo, NjiraMak, AngelMoore, Wendy CNaureckas, Edward TPeters, Stephen PPongracic, Jacqueline ASajuthi, Satria PSeibold, Max ASmith, Lewis JSolway, JulianSorkness, Christine AWenzel, SallyWhite, Steven RBurchard, Esteban GBarnes, KathleenMeyers, Deborah AIsrael, ElliotWechsler, Michael EAsthmaNet, NHLBIAli-Dinar, TarigBartnikas, LisaBaxi, SachinBeigelman, AvrahamBenson, MindyBlake, Kathryn VBurke-Roberts, ElizabethCernadas, ManuelaChmiel, James FCovar, RoninaDiMango, EmilyGaffin, JonathanGentile, DeborahGrossman, NicoleHautpman, MarissaKantor, DavidKumar, HarshaLaForce, Craig FLang, JasonLong, DaynaLouisias, MargeeMorgan, WayneMoy, JamesMyers, Ross EOlin, J TodPermaul, PerditaQue, LorettaRaissy, HengamehRobison, Rachel GRoss, KristieSheehan, WilliamSullivan-Vedder, LisaWright, Lakeia
Source
The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health. 5(12)
Subject
Human Genome
Pediatric
Genetics
Lung
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Asthma
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Respiratory
Administration
Inhalation
Adolescent
Adrenal Cortex Hormones
Adult
Black People
Bronchodilator Agents
Child
Drug Therapy
Combination
Female
Fluticasone
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Pharmacogenomic Testing
Salmeterol Xinafoate
United States
Young Adult
NHLBI AsthmaNet
Language
Abstract
BackgroundPharmacogenetic studies in asthma cohorts, primarily made up of White people of European descent, have identified loci associated with response to inhaled beta agonists and corticosteroids (ICSs). Differences exist in how individuals from different ancestral backgrounds respond to long-acting beta agonist (LABA) and ICSs. Therefore, we sought to understand the pharmacogenetic mechanisms regulating therapeutic responsiveness in individuals of African descent.MethodsWe did ancestry-based pharmacogenetic studies of children (aged 5-11 years) and adolescents and adults (aged 12-69 years) from the Best African Response to Drug (BARD) trials, in which participants with asthma uncontrolled with low-dose ICS (fluticasone propionate 50 μg in children, 100 μg in adolescents and adults) received different step-up combination therapies. The hierarchal composite outcome of pairwise superior responsiveness in BARD was based on asthma exacerbations, a 31-day difference in annualised asthma-control days, or a 5% difference in percentage predicted FEV1. We did whole-genome admixture mapping of 15 159 ancestral segments within 312 independent regions, stratified by the two age groups. The two co-primary outcome comparisons were the step up from low-dose ICS to the quintuple dose of ICS (5 × ICS: 250 μg twice daily in children and 500 μg twice daily in adolescents and adults) versus double dose (2-2·5 × ICS: 100 μg twice daily in children, 250 μg twice daily in adolescents and adults), and 5 × ICS versus 100 μg fluticasone plus a LABA (salmeterol 50 μg twice daily). We used a genome-wide significance threshold of p