4 results match your criteria: "University Institute for Bio-Sanitary Research of Extremadura[Affiliation]"

The CYP2C19 enzyme is implicated in the metabolism of several clinically used drugs. Its phenotype is usually predicted by genotyping and indicates the expected enzymatic activity for each patient. However, with a few exceptions, genotyping has not resulted in a reliable prediction of the metabolizer status, since most of the evidence currently available for this prediction comes from research into populations of predominantly European ancestry.

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Afro-Latin American Pharmacogenetics of , , and in Dominicans: A Study from the RIBEF-CEIBA Consortium.

Pharmaceutics

October 2024

Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University Institute for Bio-Sanitary Research of Extremadura INUBE, University of Extremadura, 06006 Badajoz, Spain.

Article Synopsis
  • Research highlights the importance of studying pharmacogenetic variability in drug responses, especially in diverse populations like those from the Dominican Republic.
  • The study analyzed 197 healthy volunteers' genetic ancestry and found unique CYP allele frequencies that reflect a mix of European, Native American, and African ancestries, with implications for drug metabolism.
  • Findings suggest the need for ethnicity-aware pharmacogenetic guidelines to ensure personalized medicine is accessible and effective for all populations.
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In Mexico, 75% of diabetes mellitus type 2 (DMT2) patients are not in glycaemic control criteria (HbA1c<7%); this entails a significantly variable drug response. Amongst the factors influencing such variability, are genetics, more specifically, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Three genes implied in metformin pharmacokinetics are , , and , which are polymorphic.

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Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a major global health problem. Response to first-line therapy is variable. This is partially due to interindividual variability across those genes codifying transport, metabolising, and drug activation proteins involved in first-line pharmacological treatment.

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