1. Pharmacogenomic prescribing opportunities in percutaneous coronary intervention and bone marrow transplant patients
- Author
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Lindsay Ratner, Jing ‘Daisy’ Zhu, Megan N Gower, Tejendra Patel, Jordan A Miller, Amber Cipriani, George A Stouffer, Daniel J Crona, and Craig R Lee
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Drug Prescriptions ,Tacrolimus ,Clopidogrel ,Pharmacogenomic Testing ,surgical procedures, operative ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Genetics ,Molecular Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Research Article - Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the potential impact of preemptive multigene pharmacogenomic (PGx) testing on medication prescribing in real-world clinical settings. Patients & methods: Prescription frequencies for 65 medications with actionable PGx recommendations were collected in 215 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and 131 allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (allo-HCT) patients. A simulation projected the number of PGx-guided prescribing opportunities. Results: In PCI and allo-HCT patients, respectively, 66.5 and 90.1% were prescribed at least one medication with actionable PGx prescribing recommendations. Simulations projected 26.5 and 41.2 total PGx-guided prescribing opportunities per 100 PCI and allo-HCT patients, respectively, if multigene PGx results were available. Conclusion: A multigene PGx testing strategy offers potential to optimize medication prescribing beyond clopidogrel and tacrolimus in PCI and allo-HCT patients.
- Published
- 2023