Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2021 Nov;46(12):2132-2139. doi: 10.1038/s41386-021-01097-0. Epub 2021 Jul 23.
Naltrexone can aid in reducing alcohol consumption, while acamprosate supports abstinence; however, not all patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD) benefit from these treatments. Here we present the first genome-wide association study of AUD treatment outcomes based on data from the COMBINE and PREDICT studies of acamprosate and naltrexone, and the Mayo Clinic CITA study of acamprosate. Primary analyses focused on treatment outcomes regardless of pharmacological intervention and were followed by drug-stratified analyses to identify treatment-specific pharmacogenomic predictors of acamprosate and naltrexone response. Treatment outcomes were defined as: (1) time until relapse to any drinking (TR) and (2) time until relapse to heavy drinking (THR; ≥ 5 drinks for men, ≥4 drinks for women in a day), during the first 3 months of treatment. Analyses were performed within each dataset, followed by meta-analysis across the studies (N = 1083 European ancestry participants). Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the BRE gene were associated with THR (min p = 1.6E-8) in the entire sample, while two intergenic SNPs were associated with medication-specific outcomes (naltrexone THR: rs12749274, p = 3.9E-8; acamprosate TR: rs77583603, p = 3.1E-9). The top association signal for TR (p = 7.7E-8) and second strongest signal in the THR (p = 6.1E-8) analysis of naltrexone-treated patients maps to PTPRD, a gene previously implicated in addiction phenotypes in human and animal studies. Leave-one-out polygenic risk score analyses showed significant associations with TR (p = 3.7E-4) and THR (p = 2.6E-4). This study provides the first evidence of a polygenic effect on AUD treatment response, and identifies genetic variants associated with potentially medication-specific effects on AUD treatment response.
纳曲酮有助于减少饮酒量,而坎普罗索支持戒酒;然而,并非所有酒精使用障碍(AUD)患者都能从这些治疗中受益。在这里,我们根据坎普罗索和纳曲酮的 COMBINE 和 PREDICT 研究以及 Mayo 诊所 CITA 研究的阿坎普罗斯数据,首次进行了 AUD 治疗结果的全基因组关联研究。主要分析侧重于治疗结果,无论药物干预如何,并随后进行药物分层分析,以确定坎普罗索和纳曲酮反应的特定于治疗的药物基因组预测因子。治疗结果定义为:(1)任何饮酒复发的时间(TR)和(2)重度饮酒复发的时间(THR;男性每天≥5 杯,女性每天≥4 杯),在治疗的前 3 个月内。在每个数据集内进行分析,然后对研究进行荟萃分析(N = 1083 名欧洲血统参与者)。BRE 基因中的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)与整个样本中的 THR 相关(最小 p = 1.6E-8),而两个基因间 SNP 与药物特异性结果相关(纳曲酮 THR:rs12749274,p = 3.9E-8;坎普罗索 TR:rs77583603,p = 3.1E-9)。纳曲酮治疗患者的 TR(p = 7.7E-8)和 THR(p = 6.1E-8)分析的最高关联信号映射到 PTPRD,该基因先前在人类和动物研究中与成瘾表型有关。单核苷酸多态性风险评分分析显示与 TR(p = 3.7E-4)和 THR(p = 2.6E-4)显著相关。这项研究首次提供了 AUD 治疗反应的多基因效应的证据,并确定了与 AUD 治疗反应的潜在药物特异性影响相关的遗传变异。