Pharmacogenetics of asthma controller treatment

被引:0
作者
E B Mougey
C Chen
K G Tantisira
K V Blake
S P Peters
R A Wise
S T Weiss
J J Lima
机构
[1] ALA-Asthma Clinical Research Center,Department of Biostatistics
[2] Center for Pharmacogenomics and Translational Research,undefined
[3] Nemours Children's Clinic,undefined
[4] Harvard School of Public Health,undefined
[5] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,undefined
[6] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[7] Channing Laboratory,undefined
[8] Brigham and Women's Hospital,undefined
[9] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[10] Translational Science Institute,undefined
[11] Wake Forest University Health Sciences Center,undefined
[12] Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine Research,undefined
[13] Environmental Health Sciences,undefined
[14] Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,undefined
[15] Johns Hopkins University and,undefined
[16] Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine,undefined
[17] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,undefined
来源
The Pharmacogenomics Journal | 2013年 / 13卷
关键词
asthma; Caucasians; controller; genes; pharmacogenetics; polymorphisms;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The interpatient variability in response to asthma controllers is significant and associates with pharmacogenomic variability. The goal of the present study was to identify novel variants that associate with response to common asthma controllers: fluticasone, combination of fluticasone + salmeterol and montelukast with single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in β2-adrenergic receptor, corticosteroid and leukotriene pathway candidate genes. Participants in a large clinical trial of step-down strategies volunteered for this pharmacogenetic study. A total of 169 SNPs in 26 candidate genes were genotyped in 189 Caucasian participants with asthma who took either fluticasone (100 μg bid), fluticasone propionate (100 μg) + salmeterol (50 μg) (FP/Salm) or montelukast (5 or 10 mg) each night for 16 weeks. Primary outcomes were the slopes of plots of Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) scores versus time following randomization; and the percent change in percent predicted FEV1 (ΔFEV1%pred) from enrollment to the end of the study. Associations between SNPs and outcomes were analyzed using general linear models. False discovery rate and Bonferroni corrections were used to correct for multiple comparisons. In all, 16 SNPs in seven genes were significantly associated with outcomes. For FP/Salm, three SNPs in CHRM2 associated with ACQ slope (P=2.8 × 10−5), and rs1461496 in HSPA8 associated with ΔFEV1%pred. For fluticasone, five SNPs in CRHR1 (P=1.9 × 10−4), and three SNPs in COL2A1 associated with ACQ slope and ΔFEV1%pred, respectively. For montelukast, four SNPs in CHRM2 associated with ΔFEV1%pred and predicted an opposite effect compared with fluticasone (P=9 × 10−3). The present study indentified several novel SNPs that associate with response to common asthma controllers, and support further pharmacogenomic study and the use of genetic variants to personalize asthma treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:242 / 250
页数:8
相关论文
共 202 条
[1]  
Akinbami LJ(2011)Asthma prevalence, health care use, and mortality: United States, 2005-2009 Natl Health Stat Report 32 1-14
[2]  
Moorman JE(2008)Genetic influences on response to asthma pharmacotherapy Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol 1 649-660
[3]  
Liu X(2007)Treatment heterogeneity in asthma: genetics of response to leukotriene modifiers Mol Diagn Ther 11 97-104
[4]  
Lima JJ(2009)Pharmacogenetics of asthma Curr Opin Pulm Med 15 57-62
[5]  
Lima JJ(2000)Heterogeneity of therapeutic responses in asthma Br Med Bull 56 1054-1070
[6]  
Lima JJ(2009)Repeatability of response to asthma medications J Allergy Clin Immunol 123 385-390
[7]  
Blake KV(2004)TBX21: a functional variant predicts improvement in asthma with the use of inhaled corticosteroids Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101 18099-18104
[8]  
Tantisira KG(2004)Corticosteroid pharmacogenetics: association of sequence variants in CRHR1 with improved lung function in asthmatics treated with inhaled corticosteroids Hum Mol Genet 13 1353-1359
[9]  
Weiss ST(2007)beta-adrenergic receptor genotype and response to salmeterol J Allergy Clin Immunol 120 218-219
[10]  
Drazen JM(2006)beta-Adrenergic receptor polymorphisms and response to salmeterol Am J Respir Crit Care Med 173 519-526