AI Article Synopsis

  • Pharmacogenomic testing is increasingly important for psychiatric care, but more research is needed to understand its practical benefits in real-world settings.
  • A study involving 15,000 patients revealed that 65% had potentially actionable genetic traits related to drug metabolism, particularly for the genes CYP2C19 and CYP2D6, with 87% showing some potential for actionable insights.
  • The use of advanced genetic sequencing helped identify significant genetic variations that could affect treatment decisions, suggesting that early pharmacogenomic testing might improve medication prescribing and patient outcomes in psychiatric care.

Article Abstract

Pharmacogenomic testing has emerged as an aid in clinical decision making for psychiatric providers, but more data is needed regarding its utility in clinical practice and potential impact on patient care. In this cross-sectional study, we determined the real-world prevalence of pharmacogenomic actionability in patients receiving psychiatric care. Potential actionability was based on the prevalence of CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 phenotypes, including CYP2D6 allele-specific copy number variations (CNVs). Combined actionability additionally incorporated CYP2D6 phenoconversion and the novel CYP2C-TG haplotype in patients with available medication data. Across 15,000 patients receiving clinical pharmacogenomic testing, 65% had potentially actionable CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 phenotypes, and phenotype assignment was impacted by CYP2D6 allele-specific CNVs in 2% of all patients. Of 4114 patients with medication data, 42% had CYP2D6 phenoconversion from drug interactions and 20% carried a novel CYP2C haplotype potentially altering actionability. A total of 87% had some form of potential actionability from genetic findings and/or phenoconversion. Genetic variation detected via next-generation sequencing led to phenotype reassignment in 22% of individuals overall (2% in CYP2D6 and 20% in CYP2C19). Ultimately, pharmacogenomic testing using next-generation sequencing identified potential actionability in most patients receiving psychiatric care. Early pharmacogenomic testing may provide actionable insights to aid clinicians in drug prescribing to optimize psychiatric care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11541190PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-024-02588-4DOI Listing

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