Staiger Harald, Schaeffeler Elke, Schwab Matthias, Häring Hans-Ulrich
Interfaculty Centre for Pharmacogenomics and Pharma Research at the University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Rev Diabet Stud. 2015 Fall-Winter;12(3-4):363-76. doi: 10.1900/RDS.2015.12.363. Epub 2016 Feb 10.
Many clinical treatment studies have reported remarkable interindividual variability in the response to pharmaceutical drugs, and uncovered the existence of inadequate treatment response, non-response, and even adverse drug reactions. Pharmacogenetics addresses the impact of genetic variants on treatment outcome including side-effects. In recent years, it has also entered the field of clinical diabetes research. In modern type 2 diabetes therapy, metformin is established as first-line drug. The latest pharmaceutical developments, including incretin mimetics, dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors (gliptins), and sodium/glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (gliflozins), are currently experiencing a marked increase in clinical use, while the prescriptions of α-glucosidase inhibitors, sulfonylureas, meglitinides (glinides), and thiazolidinediones (glitazones) are declining, predominantly because of reported side-effects. This review summarizes the current knowledge about gene-drug interactions observed in therapy studies with the above drugs. We report drug interactions with candidate genes involved in the pharmacokinetics (e.g., drug transporters) and pharmacodynamics (drug targets and downstream signaling steps) of the drugs, with known type 2 diabetes risk genes and previously unknown genes derived from hypothesis-free approaches such as genome-wide association studies. Moreover, some new and promising candidate genes for future pharmacogenetic assessment are highlighted. Finally, we critically appraise the current state of type 2 diabetes pharmacogenetics in the light of its impact on therapeutic decisions, and we refer to major problems, and make suggestions for future efforts in this field to help improve the clinical relevance of the results, and to establish genetically determined treatment failure.
许多临床治疗研究报告称,药物反应存在显著的个体差异,并发现了治疗反应不足、无反应甚至药物不良反应的情况。药物遗传学研究基因变异对治疗结果(包括副作用)的影响。近年来,它也进入了临床糖尿病研究领域。在现代2型糖尿病治疗中,二甲双胍被确立为一线药物。包括肠促胰岛素类似物、二肽基肽酶4抑制剂(格列汀类)和钠/葡萄糖协同转运蛋白2抑制剂(列净类)在内的最新药物进展,目前在临床应用中显著增加,而α-葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂、磺脲类、格列奈类和噻唑烷二酮类(格列酮类)的处方量正在下降,主要原因是报告的副作用。本综述总结了上述药物治疗研究中观察到的基因-药物相互作用的现有知识。我们报告了与药物的药代动力学(如药物转运体)和药效学(药物靶点及下游信号传导步骤)相关的候选基因、已知的2型糖尿病风险基因以及通过全基因组关联研究等无假设方法发现的未知基因之间的药物相互作用。此外,还强调了一些未来药物遗传学评估中有前景的新候选基因。最后,我们根据2型糖尿病药物遗传学对治疗决策的影响,批判性地评估了其现状,指出了主要问题,并对该领域未来的工作提出了建议,以帮助提高研究结果的临床相关性,并确定基因决定的治疗失败情况。