AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the use of pharmacogenetics for personalized medication in children's hospitals across Mainland China, aiming to assess its implementation and effectiveness.
  • A survey was conducted at 50 hospitals, with a 76% response rate, revealing limited use of genetic testing; only a few hospitals conducted comprehensive tests, and many lacked proper quality control and training for practitioners.
  • Despite progress in pediatric pharmacogenomics, challenges remain in infrastructure, training, and funding, necessitating collaboration among health administrators, insurance bodies, and hospitals to enhance GTPM practices.

Article Abstract

Background: Pharmacogenetics/pharmacogenomics (PGx) focuses on the genetic variation that causes the heterogeneity of pharmacokinetics and drug response among individuals and has the potential to predict individual efficacy and/or side effects. This study aims to investigate and understand the implementation of genetic testing for the personalized medication (GTPM) in children's hospitals in Mainland China.

Methods: A survey was conducted on 50 children's hospitals from 31 provinces, municipalities, and autonomous regions across Mainland China, and statistical analysis and recommendations were made.

Results: Questionnaire response was rate of 76.0% (38/50). Data from 15 hospitals conducting GTPM were included in this study, but only 6 hospitals had offered PGx tests for no less than five drug-related genes, and only 5 hospitals had covered more than ten drugs, which was a small scale overall. 20.0% of the laboratories did not conduct internal quality control, and 33.3% did not participate in inter-laboratory quality assessment. 46.7% of the practitioners did not receive external training. The primary goal for GTPM was to optimize drug dosage in the 15 hospitals, while the main challenge for GTPM was the implementation cost.

Conclusion: Although GTPM in pediatrics has made major progress in Mainland China in recent years, there were still various problems in terms of software, hardware configuration, personnel allocation, business scale, quality control, and result interpretation. This requires joint efforts of health administration, medical insurance departments, researchers, and hospitals to promote and improve GTPM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11409549PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-11535-6DOI Listing

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