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Pharmacogenomics-Based Point-of-Care Clinical Decision Support Significantly Alters Drug Prescribing.

Authors :
O'Donnell PH
Wadhwa N
Danahey K
Borden BA
Lee SM
Hall JP
Klammer C
Hussain S
Siegler M
Sorrentino MJ
Davis AM
Sacro YA
Nanda R
Polonsky TS
Koyner JL
Burnet DL
Lipstreuer K
Rubin DT
Mulcahy C
Strek ME
Harper W
Cifu AS
Polite B
Patrick-Miller L
Yeo KT
Leung E
Volchenboum SL
Altman RB
Olopade OI
Stadler WM
Meltzer DO
Ratain MJ
Source :
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics [Clin Pharmacol Ther] 2017 Nov; Vol. 102 (5), pp. 859-869. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jun 15.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Changes in behavior are necessary to apply genomic discoveries to practice. We prospectively studied medication changes made by providers representing eight different medicine specialty clinics whose patients had submitted to preemptive pharmacogenomic genotyping. An institutional clinical decision support (CDS) system provided pharmacogenomic results using traffic light alerts: green = genomically favorable, yellow = genomic caution, red = high risk. The influence of pharmacogenomic alerts on prescribing behaviors was the primary endpoint. In all, 2,279 outpatient encounters were analyzed. Independent of other potential prescribing mediators, medications with high pharmacogenomic risk were changed significantly more often than prescription drugs lacking pharmacogenomic information (odds ratio (OR) = 26.2 (9.0-75.3), P < 0.0001). Medications with cautionary pharmacogenomic information were also changed more frequently (OR = 2.4 (1.7-3.5), P < 0.0001). No pharmacogenomically high-risk medications were prescribed during the entire study when physicians consulted the CDS tool. Pharmacogenomic information improved prescribing in patterns aimed at reducing patient risk, demonstrating that enhanced prescription decision-making is achievable through clinical integration of genomic medicine.<br /> (© 2017 American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-6535
Volume :
102
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28398598
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cpt.709