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Pharmacogenetic studies of long-acting beta agonist and inhaled corticosteroid responsiveness in randomised controlled trials of individuals of African descent with asthma

Authors :
Loren C. Denlinger
Jerry A. Krishnan
Maria Pino-Yanes
Hengameh Raissy
Wayne J. Morgan
Manuela Cernadas
Michael D. Cabana
Daniel J. Jackson
J. Tod Olin
David Kantor
Julian Solway
Nicole Grossman
Elizabeth J. Ampleford
Jonathan M. Gaffin
Ronina Covar
Corey Cox
Michael E. Wechsler
James F. Chmiel
Elliot Israel
Kathleen C. Barnes
Steven R. White
Lisa Sullivan-Vedder
Stephen C. Lazarus
Fernando Holguin
Gregory A. Hawkins
Anne M. Fitzpatrick
Jason E. Lang
Vernon M. Chinchilli
Harsha Kumar
Jacqueline A. Pongracic
Max A. Seibold
Njira L Lugogo
Esteban G. Burchard
Angel C.Y. Mak
Fernando D. Martinez
Esther Herrera-Luis
Stephen P. Peters
James N. Moy
Lewis J. Smith
Victor E. Ortega
Sachin Baxi
Craig F. LaForce
Perdita Permaul
Marissa Hautpman
John J. Lima
Wanda Phipatanakul
Tarig Ali-Dinar
Michelle Daya
Juan Carlos Cardet
Kristie Ross
Nizar N. Jarjour
Christine A. Sorkness
Celeste Eng
Robert F. Lemanske
Susan J. Kunselman
Monica Kraft
Rachel G. Robison
Stanley J. Szefler
Deborah A. Meyers
Deborah Gentile
Mario Castro
Satria P Sajuthi
Dayna Long
Dave Mauger
Margee Louisias
Elizabeth Burke-Roberts
Donglei Hu
Ross E. Myers
Sally E. Wenzel
Kathryn V. Blake
Avraham Beigelman
Lakeia Wright
Mindy Benson
Leonard B. Bacharier
Eugene R. Bleecker
Wendy C. Moore
Emily DiMango
Loretta Que
Edward T. Naureckas
Lisa Bartnikas
William Sheehan
Source :
The Lancet. Child & adolescent health, vol 5, iss 12, Lancet Child Adolesc Health
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Pharmacogenetic studies in asthma cohorts, primarily made up of White people of European descent, have identified loci associated with response to inhaled beta agonists and corticosteroids (ICSs). Differences exist in how individuals from different ancestral backgrounds respond to long-acting beta agonist (LABA) and ICSs. Therefore, we sought to understand the pharmacogenetic mechanisms regulating therapeutic responsiveness in individuals of African descent. METHODS We did ancestry-based pharmacogenetic studies of children (aged 5-11 years) and adolescents and adults (aged 12-69 years) from the Best African Response to Drug (BARD) trials, in which participants with asthma uncontrolled with low-dose ICS (fluticasone propionate 50 μg in children, 100 μg in adolescents and adults) received different step-up combination therapies. The hierarchal composite outcome of pairwise superior responsiveness in BARD was based on asthma exacerbations, a 31-day difference in annualised asthma-control days, or a 5% difference in percentage predicted FEV1. We did whole-genome admixture mapping of 15 159 ancestral segments within 312 independent regions, stratified by the two age groups. The two co-primary outcome comparisons were the step up from low-dose ICS to the quintuple dose of ICS (5 × ICS: 250 μg twice daily in children and 500 μg twice daily in adolescents and adults) versus double dose (2-2·5 × ICS: 100 μg twice daily in children, 250 μg twice daily in adolescents and adults), and 5 × ICS versus 100 μg fluticasone plus a LABA (salmeterol 50 μg twice daily). We used a genome-wide significance threshold of p

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Child & adolescent health, vol 5, iss 12, Lancet Child Adolesc Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....34215da576a7d9499f7161c5b4881d4e