Duke Global Proof-of-Concept (POC) Research Network, Duke Clinical Research Unit (DCRU) & Duke Clinical Research Institute (DCRI), Duke University, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Pharmacogenomics. 2013 Jul;14(9):1085-97. doi: 10.2217/pgs.13.81.
Pharmacogenomics (PGx) offers the promise of utilizing genetic fingerprints to predict individual responses to drugs in terms of safety, efficacy and pharmacokinetics. Early-phase clinical trial PGx applications can identify human genome variations that are meaningful to study design, selection of participants, allocation of resources and clinical research ethics. Results can inform later-phase study design and pipeline developmental decisions. Nevertheless, our review of the clinicaltrials.gov database demonstrates that PGx is rarely used by drug developers. Of the total 323 trials that included PGx as an outcome, 80% have been conducted by academic institutions after initial regulatory approval. Barriers for the application of PGx are discussed. We propose a framework for the role of PGx in early-phase drug development and recommend PGx be universally considered in study design, result interpretation and hypothesis generation for later-phase studies, but PGx results from underpowered studies should not be used by themselves to terminate drug-development programs.
药物基因组学(PGx)有望利用基因指纹来预测个体对药物的安全性、疗效和药代动力学的反应。早期临床试验 PGx 应用可以识别对研究设计、参与者选择、资源分配和临床研究伦理有意义的人类基因组变异。结果可以为后期研究设计和管道开发决策提供信息。然而,我们对 clinicaltrials.gov 数据库的审查表明,药物开发者很少使用 PGx。在总共包含 PGx 作为结果的 323 项试验中,有 80%是在初始监管批准后由学术机构进行的。讨论了 PGx 应用的障碍。我们提出了一个在药物早期开发中应用 PGx 的框架,并建议在研究设计、结果解释和后期研究假设生成中普遍考虑 PGx,但应避免仅根据效力不足的研究结果来终止药物开发项目。