114 research outputs found

    Ethanol and production of the hepatotoxic metabolite of acetaminophen in healthy adults

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109855/1/cptclpt200062.pd

    Developing a Prototype System for Integrating Pharmacogenomics Findings into Clinical Practice

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    Findings from pharmacogenomics (PGx) studies have the potential to be applied to individualize drug therapy to improve efficacy and reduce adverse drug events. Researchers have identified factors influencing uptake of genomics in medicine, but little is known about the specific technical barriers to incorporating PGx into existing clinical frameworks. We present the design and development of a prototype PGx clinical decision support (CDS) system that builds on existing clinical infrastructure and incorporates semi-active and active CDS. Informing this work, we updated previous evaluations of PGx knowledge characteristics, and of how the CDS capabilities of three local clinical systems align with data and functional requirements for PGx CDS. We summarize characteristics of PGx knowledge and technical needs for implementing PGx CDS within existing clinical frameworks. PGx decision support rules derived from FDA drug labels primarily involve drug metabolizing genes, vary in maturity, and the majority support the post-analytic phase of genetic testing. Computerized provider order entry capabilities are key functional requirements for PGx CDS and were best supported by one of the three systems we evaluated. We identified two technical needs when building on this system, the need for (1) new or existing standards for data exchange to connect clinical data to PGx knowledge, and (2) a method for implementing semi-active CDS. Our analyses enhance our understanding of principles for designing and implementing CDS for drug therapy individualization and our current understanding of PGx characteristics in a clinical context. Characteristics of PGx knowledge and capabilities of current clinical systems can help govern decisions about CDS implementation, and can help guide decisions made by groups that develop and maintain knowledge resources such that delivery of content for clinical care is supported

    Bi-cultural dynamics for risk and protective factors for cardiometabolic health in an Alaska Native (Yup\u27ik) population

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    Alaska Native people experience disparities in mortality from heart disease and stroke. This work attempts to better understand the relationships between socioeconomic, behavioral, and cardiometabolic risk factors among Yup\u27ik people of southwestern Alaska, with a focus on the role of the socioeconomic, and cultural components. Using a cross-sectional sample of 486 Yup\u27ik adults, we fitted a Partial Least Squares Path Model (PLS-PM) to assess the associations between components, including demographic factors [age and gender], socioeconomic factors [education, economic status, Yup\u27ik culture, and Western culture], behavioral factors [diet, cigarette smoking and smokeless tobacco use, and physical activity], and cardiometabolic risk factors [adiposity, triglyceride-HDL and LDL lipids, glycemia, and blood pressure]. We found relatively mild associations of education and economic status with cardiometabolic risk factors, in contrast with studies in other populations. The socioeconomic factor and participation in Yup\u27ik culture had potentially protective associations with adiposity, triglyceride-HDL lipids, and blood pressure, whereas participation in Western culture had a protective association with blood pressure. We also found a moderating effect of participation in Western culture on the relationships between Yup\u27ik culture participation and both blood pressure and LDL lipids, indicating a potentially beneficial additional effect of biculturalism. Our results suggest that reinforcing protective effects of both Yup\u27ik and Western cultures could be useful for interventions aimed at reducing cardiometabolic health disparities

    Genetic polymorphisms in the catechol estrogen metabolism pathway and breast cancer risk

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    Background: This study investigated whether single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes within the catechol estrogen metabolism pathway altered the risk of breast cancer alone or in combination, as well as whether menopausal hormone therapy (HT) modified the effect of these SNPs on breast cancer risk. Methods: In a population-based case-control study of breast cancer, 891 cases and 878 controls were genotyped for six functional SNPs in the COMT, CYP1B1, GSTM1, GSTP1, and GSTT1 genes. Results: Women homozygous with the T allele in CYP1B1*2 (Ser119; rs1056827) were at 1.69 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.17-2.46) times the risk of women homozygous with the G allele; women homozygous with the G allele in GSTP1 (Val105; rs1695) were at 0.73 (95% CI: 0.54-0.99) times the risk of breast cancer compared to women homozygous with the A allele. No other SNPs tested were associated with breast cancer to any appreciable degree. Potential gene-gene and gene-HT interactions were investigated. Conclusion: With the exception of GSTP1 and possibly CYP1B1*2, our findings do not provide support for the role of genetic variation in the catechol estrogen metabolism pathway and breast cancer risk in post-menopausal women

    Interpatient heterogeneity in expression of CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 in small bowel: Lack of prediction by the erythromycin breath test

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    The CYP3A subfamily of cytochromes P450 metabolize many medications and environmental contaminants. CYP3A4 and, in 25% of patients, CYP3A5 seem to be the major CYP3A genes expressed in adult liver. Hepatic levels of CYP3A4 can be estimated by the erythromycin breath test and vary at least 10-fold among patients. CYP3A4 has also been shown to be present in small bowel where it is responsible for significant "first-pass" metabolism of orally administered substrates. However, it is not known whether there is significant interindividual variability in the intestinal expression of CYP3A4, or whether the liver and intestinal catalytic activities of CYP3A4 correlate within an individual. It is also not known whether CYP3A5 is expressed in the small intestine. To address these questions, we administered the erythromycin breath test to 20 patients and obtained biopsies from their small bowel. There was a 6-fold variation in CYP3A catalytic activity (midazolam hydroxylation), an 11-fold variation in CYP3A4 protein content, and an 8-fold variation in CYP3A4 mRNA content in intestinal biopsies. There was an excellent correlation between intestinal CYP3A4 protein level and catalytic activity (r = 0.86; p = 0.0001); however, neither parameter significantly correlated with hepatic CYP3A4 activity as measured by the erythromycin breath test result (r = 0.27; p = 0.24 and r = 0.33; p = 0.15, respectively). We also found that CYP3A5 protein was readily detectable in biopsies from 14 (70%) of the patients, indicating that CYP3A5 is commonly expressed in human small intestine

    Genetic and seasonal determinants of vitamin D status in Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT) participants

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    Background: Vitamin D is a hormone produced in the skin upon ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation. Vitamin D is a crucial regulator of calcium and phosphate levels for bone mineralization and other physiological roles. Vitamin D levels vary globally in human populations due to genetics, geography, and other demographic factors. It is estimated that 20-85 % of the variability in vitamin D levels is driven by genetic variation. To improve our understanding of contributors to vitamin D levels, we conducted a candidate-gene study in partnership with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT). Methods: We recruited 472 CSKT study participants on the Flathead Reservation in Montana. Demographic factors included age, BMI, and gender (185 male and 287 female; ≥ 18 years old). Genomic DNA and plasma were isolated from whole blood. We sequenced 14 vitamin D regulatory candidate genes: CASR, CUBN, CYP2R1, CYP3A4,CYP24A1, CYP27B1, DHCR7, GC, RXRA, RXRB, RXRG, SULT2A1, UGT1A4, and VDR. We also measured plasma levels of vitamin D and vitamin D metabolites by liquid chromatography/mass-spectrometry (LC/MS), including the clinical marker of vitamin D status, 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 [25(OH)D3]. We tested demographic factors as well as common and rare genetic variants for statistical associations with vitamin D levels using bioinformatics software and R statistical programming language code. Results: We identified 7,370 total genetic variants with 8% (n = 585) of them being novel. We identified 60 genetic variants that may be of clinical significance (disease associated or predicted to influence medication response). Vitamin D levels were below sufficiency [25(OH)D3 + 25(OH)D2 levels \u3c 20 ng/mL] in 56 % of CSKT participants across the year. We observed seasonal vitamin D and metabolite level fluctuations in a seasonal, sinusoidal statistical model with peak concentrations in June – August and trough concentrations in December – February. In linear regression analysis, we found that age, BMI, season, and 5 variants in CUBN and CYP3A4 were significantly associated with 25(OH)D3 concentration (p-value\u3c 0.05). In logistic regression, we found that 4 variants in CUBN, CYP3A4, and UGT1A4 were associated with 25(OH)D sufficiency status [25(OH)D3 + 25(OH)D2 levels of 20 ng/mL] (p-value\u3c 0.05). Multivariate linear regression analysis revealed that genetic variation alone explained ~13% of the variability in 25(OH)D3 concentration in CSKT participants. Genetic variation and environmental factors together explained ~23 % of the variability in 25(OH)D3 concentration in CSKT participants. It is likely that genetic variation in additional genes and other environmental factors (e.g., dietary vitamin D intake) that were not included in this study explain the remaining variability in 25(OH)D3 concentration. Conclusion: This research addresses the need for increased inclusion of American Indian and Alaska Natives in precision medicine health research. We are the first to describe the contribution of season and genetics to vitamin D levels in an American Indian population. Our next steps will be to use these findings to perform mechanistic studies and develop interventional strategies for the CSKT people

    Mechanisms of enhanced oral availability of CYP3A4 substrates by grapefruit constituents: Decreased enterocyte CYP3A4 concentration and mechanism-based inactivation by furanocoumarins

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    Grapefruit juice increases the oral availability of a variety of CYP3A4 substrates. It has been shown that recurrent grapefruit juice ingestion results in a loss of CYP3A4 from the small bowel epithelium. We now show that the reduction in intestinal CYP3A4 concentration is rapid; a 47% decrease occurred in a healthy volunteer within 4 hr after consuming grapefruit juice. To identify the specific components of the juice responsible for this effect, we used a recently developed Caco-2 cell culture model of human intestinal epithelium that expresses catalytically active CYP3A4. We found that grapefruit oil and two furanocoumarin constituents (6*,7*-dihydroxybergamottin and a closely related dimer) caused a dose-dependent fall in CYP3A4 catalytic activity and immunoreactive CYP3A4 concentration. The effect was selective in that concentrations of CYP1A1 and CYP2D6 did not fall, consistent with previous results obtained in vivo. Assays of various juices confirmed that 6*,7*-dihydroxybergamottin is the major furanocoumarin present and, although its concentration varies significantly among types and brands of grapefruit juice, it is consistently present in concentrations exceeding the IC50 (1 mM) for loss of midazolam 1*-hydroxylase activity determined in the Caco-2 cells. Studies with recombinant CYP3A4 revealed that 6*,7*-dihydroxybergamottin is a mechanism-based inactivator, which supports the idea that loss of CYP3A4 results from accelerated degradation of the enzyme. We conclude that the effect of grapefruit juice on oral availability of CYP3A4 substrates can be largely accounted for by the presence of 6*,7*-dihydroxybergamottin although other furanocoumarins probably also contribute

    A Semi-Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Model Describing the Altered Metabolism of Midazolam Due to Inflammation in Mice

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript.Purpose To investigate influence of inflammation on metabolism and pharmacokinetics (PK) of midazolam (MDZ) and construct a semi-physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model to predict PK in mice with inflammatory disease. Methods Glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (GPI)-mediated inflammation was used as a preclinical model of arthritis in DBA/1 mice. CYP3A substrate MDZ was selected to study changes in metabolism and PK during the inflammation. The semi-PBPK model was constructed using mouse physiological parameters, liver microsome metabolism, and healthy animal PK data. In addition, serum cytokine, and liver-CYP (cytochrome P450 enzymes) mRNA levels were examined. Results The in vitro metabolite formation rate was suppressed in liver microsomes prepared from the GPI-treated mice as compared to the healthy mice. Further, clearance of MDZ was reduced during inflammation as compared to the healthy group. Finally, the semi-PBPK model was used to predict PK of MDZ after GPI-mediated inflammation. IL-6 and TNF-α levels were elevated and liver-cyp3a11 mRNA was reduced after GPI treatment. Conclusion The semi-PBPK model successfully predicted PK parameters of MDZ in the disease state. The model may be applied to predict PK of other drugs under disease conditions using healthy animal PK and liver microsomal data as inputs

    Gut instincts: CYP3A4 and intestinal drug metabolism

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    First-pass metabolism is a common cause of incomplete and variable absolute bioavailability for an orally dosed drug. The drug-metabolizing enzyme CYP3A4 is often implicated in this process, resulting, in some cases, in systemic exposures of less than 15% of the administered dose. By creating an elegant CYP3A4-transgenic mouse model, van Herwaarden et al. show in this issue of the JCI that first-pass metabolism of the anticancer agent docetaxel by the gut wall, and not the liver, is likely to be the major cause of its low oral bioavailability in humans (see the related article beginning on page 3583). This study helps explain interpatient differences in efficacy and safety following oral therapy with approved CYP3A4 substrates and provides a powerful new tool for preclinical predictions of first-pass metabolism for new drugs in development
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