AI Article Synopsis

  • The activity of the thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) gene significantly affects how patients metabolize and respond to thiopurine drugs, making TPMT testing essential for personalized treatment.
  • A new high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method was developed to measure TPMT activity directly in whole blood, demonstrating similar or improved accuracy compared to the traditional erythrocyte method.
  • The whole-blood method showed high specificity in distinguishing TPMT activity levels and is now recommended for both clinical and research purposes, with a defined cutoff for normal versus reduced activity levels.

Article Abstract

Background: Variation in metabolism, toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of thiopurine drugs is largely influenced by genetic polymorphisms in the thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) gene. Determination of TPMT activity is routinely performed in patients to adjust drug therapy.

Methods: We further optimized a previously established high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method by measuring TPMT activity in whole blood instead of isolated erythrocytes, which is based on conversion of 6-mercaptopurine to 6-methylmercaptopurine using S-adenosyl-methionine as methyl donor.

Results: The simplified TPMT whole-blood method showed similar or better analytical and diagnostic performance compared with the former erythrocyte assay. The whole-blood method was linear for TPMT activities between 0 and 40 nmol/(mL·h) with a quantification limit of 0.1 nmol/(mL·h). Within-day imprecision and between-day imprecision were ≤5.1% and ≤8.5%, respectively. The optimized method determining TPMT activity in whole blood (y) showed agreement with the former method determining TPMT activity in erythrocytes (x) (n=45, y=1.218+0.882x; p>0.05). Phenotype-genotype concordance (n=300) of the whole-blood method was better when TPMT activity was expressed per volume of whole blood (specificity 92.2%), whereas correction for hematocrit resulted in lower genotype concordance (specificity 86.9%). A new cutoff for the whole-blood method to distinguish normal from reduced TPMT activity was determined at ≤6.7 nmol/(mL·h).

Conclusions: This optimized TPMT phenotyping assay from whole blood using 6-MP as substrate is suitable for research and routine clinical analysis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2017-0670DOI Listing

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