Abstract

Background— Pharmacogenetic-guided dosing of warfarin is a promising application of “personalized medicine” but has not been adequately tested in randomized trials. Methods and Results— Consenting patients (n=206) being initiated on warfarin were randomized to pharmacogenetic-guided or standard dosing. Buccal swab DNA was genotyped for CYP2C9 *2 and CYP2C9 * 3 and VKORC1 C1173T with a rapid assay. Standard dosing followed an empirical protocol, whereas pharmacogenetic-guided dosing followed a regression equation including the 3 genetic variants and age, sex, and weight. Prothrombin time international normalized ratio (INR) was measured routinely on days 0, 3, 5, 8, 21, 60, and 90. A research pharmacist unblinded to treatment strategy managed dose adjustments. Patients were followed up for up to 3 months. Pharmacogenetic-guided predicted doses more accurately approximated stable doses ( P <0.001), resulting in smaller ( P =0.002) and fewer ( P =0.03) dosing changes and INRs ( P =0.06). However, percent out-of-range INRs (pharmacogenetic=30.7%, standard=33.1%), the primary end point, did not differ significantly between arms. Despite this, when restricted to wild-type patients (who required larger doses; P =0.001) and multiple variant carriers (who required smaller doses; P <0.001) in exploratory analyses, results (pharmacogenetic=29%, standard=39%) achieved nominal significance ( P =0.03). Multiple variant allele carriers were at increased risk of an INR of ≥4 ( P =0.03). Conclusions— An algorithm guided by pharmacogenetic and clinical factors improved the accuracy and efficiency of warfarin dose initiation. Despite this, the primary end point of a reduction in out-of-range INRs was not achieved. In subset analyses, pharmacogenetic guidance showed promise for wild-type and multiple variant genotypes.

Keywords

MedicineDosingPharmacogeneticsVKORC1WarfarinCYP2C9Clinical endpointRandomized controlled trialInternal medicinePharmacologyAnesthesiaGenotypeAtrial fibrillation

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Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
116
Issue
22
Pages
2563-2570
Citations
727
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Jeffrey L. Anderson, Benjamin D. Horne, Scott M. Stevens et al. (2007). Randomized Trial of Genotype-Guided Versus Standard Warfarin Dosing in Patients Initiating Oral Anticoagulation. Circulation , 116 (22) , 2563-2570. https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.107.737312

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DOI
10.1161/circulationaha.107.737312